Covering End

Henry James

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Table of Contents

1

At the foot of the staircase he waited and listened, thinking he had heard her call to him from the
gallery, high aloft but out of view, to which he had allowed her independent access and whence indeed, on her first
going up, the sound of her appreciation had reached him in rapid movements, evident rushes and dashes, and in droll,
charming cries that echoed through the place. He had afterwards, expectant and restless, been, for another look, to the
house-door, and then had fidgeted back into the hall, where her voice again caught him. It was many a day since such a
voice had sounded in those empty chambers, and never perhaps, in all the years, for poor Chivers, had any voice at all
launched a note so friendly and so free.

“Oh, no, mum, there ain’t no one whatever come yet. It’s quite all right, mum — you can please yourself!” If he left
her to range, all his pensive little economy seemed to say, wasn’t it just his poor pickings? He quitted the stairs,
but stopped again, with his hand to his ear, as he heard her once more appeal to him. “Lots of lovely —? Lovely
what, mum? Little ups and downs?” he quavered aloft. “Oh, as you say, mum: as many as in a poor man’s life!”
She was clearly disposed, as she roamed in delight from point to point, to continue to talk, and, with his better ear
and his scooped hand, he continued to listen hard. “‘Dear little crooked steps’? Yes, mum; please mind ’em, mum: they
be cruel in the dark corners!” She appeared to take another of her light scampers, the sign of a fresh discovery and a
fresh response; at which he felt his heart warm with the success of a trust of her that might after all have been rash.
Once more her voice reached him and once more he gossiped back. “Coming up too? Not if you’ll kindly indulge me, mum —
I must be where I can watch the bell. It takes watching as well as hearing!”— he dropped, as he resumed his round, to a
murmur of great patience. This was taken up the next moment by the husky plaint of the signal itself, which seemed to
confess equally to short wind and creaking joints. It moved, however, distinguishably, and its motion made him start
much more as if he had been guilty of sleeping at his post than as if he had waited half the day. “Mercy, if I
didn’t watch —!” He shuffled across the wide stone-paved hall and, losing himself beneath the great arch of
the short passage to the entrance-front, hastened to admit his new visitor. He gives us thereby the use of his
momentary absence for a look at the place he has left.

This is the central hall, high and square, brown and grey, flagged beneath and timbered above, of an old English
country-house; an apartment in which a single survey is a perception of long and lucky continuities. It would have been
difficult to find elsewhere anything at once so old and so actual, anything that had plainly come so far, far down
without, at any moment of the endless journey, losing its way. To stand there and look round was to wonder a good deal
— yet without arriving at an answer — whether it had been most neglected or most cherished; there was such resignation
in its long survival and yet such bravery in its high polish. If it had never been spoiled, this was partly, no doubt,
because it had been, for a century, given up; but what it had been given up to was, after all, homely and familiar use.
It had in it at the present moment indeed much of the chill of fallen fortunes; but there was no concession in its
humility and no hypocrisy in its welcome. It was magnificent and shabby, and the eyes of the dozen dark old portraits
seemed, in their eternal attention, to count the cracks in the pavement, the rents in the seats of the chairs, and the
missing tones in the Flemish tapestry. Above the tapestry, which, in its turn, was above the high oak wainscot, most of
these stiff images — on the side on which it principally reigned — were placed; and they held up their heads to assure
all comers that a tone or two was all that was missing, and that they had never waked up in winter dawns to
any glimmer of bereavement, in the long night, of any relic or any feature. Such as it was, the company was all there;
every inch of old oak, every yard of old arras, every object of ornament or of use to which these surfaces formed so
rare a background. If the watchers on the walls had ever found a gap in their own rank, the ancient roof, of a
certainty, would have been shaken by their collective gasp. As a matter of fact it was rich and firm — it had almost
the dignity of the vault of a church. On this Saturday afternoon in August, a hot, still day, such of the casements as
freely worked in the discoloured glass of the windows stood open in one quarter to a terrace that overlooked a park and
in another to a wonderful old empty court that communicated with a wonderful old empty garden. The staircase, wide and
straight, mounted, full in sight, to a landing that was half-way up; and on the right, as you faced this staircase, a
door opened out of the brown panelling into a glimpse of a little morning-room, where, in a slanted, gilded light,
there was brownness too, mixed with notes of old yellow. On the left, toward court and garden, another door stood open
to the warm air. Still as you faced the staircase you had at your right, between that monument and the morning-room,
the arch through which Chivers had disappeared.

His reappearance interrupts and yet in a manner, after all, quickens our intense impression; Chivers on the spot,
and in this severe but spacious setting, was so perfect an image of immemorial domesticity. It would have been
impossible perhaps, however, either to tell his age or to name his use: he was of the age of all the history that
lurked in all the corners and of any use whatever you might be so good as still to find for him. Considerably shrunken
and completely silvered, he had perpetual agreement in the droop of his kind white head and perpetual inquiry in the
jerk of the idle old hands now almost covered by the sleeves of the black dress-coat which, twenty years before, must
have been by a century or two the newest thing in the house and into which his years appeared to have declined very
much as a shrunken family moves into a part of its habitation. This attire was completed by a white necktie that, in
honour of the day, he himself had this morning done up. The humility he betrayed and the oddity he concealed were alike
brought out by his juxtaposition with the gentleman he had admitted.

To admit Mr. Prodmore was anywhere and at any time, as you would immediately have recognised, an immense admission.
He was a personage of great presence and weight, with a large smooth face in which a small sharp meaning was planted
like a single pin in the tight red toilet-cushion of a guest-chamber. He wore a blue frock-coat and a stiff white
waistcoat and a high white hat that he kept on his head with a kind of protesting cock, while in his buttonhole nestled
a bold prize plant on which he occasionally lowered a proprietary eye that seemed to remind it of its being born to a
public career. Mr. Prodmore’s appearance had evidently been thought out, but it might have struck you that the old
portraits took it in with a sterner stare, with a fixedness indeed in which a visitor more sensitive would have read a
consciousness of his remaining, in their presence, so jauntily, so vulgarly covered. He had never a glance for them,
and it would have been easy after a minute to see that this was an old story between them. Their manner, as it were,
sensibly increased the coolness. This coolness became a high rigour as Mr. Prodmore encountered, from the very
threshold, a disappointment.

“No one here?” he indignantly demanded.

“I’m sorry to say no one has come, sir,” Chivers replied; “but I’ve had a telegram from Captain Yule.”

Mr. Prodmore’s apprehension flared out. “Not to say he ain’t coming?”

“He was to take the 2.20 from Paddington; he certainly should be here!” The old man spoke as if his
non-arrival were the most unaccountable thing in the world, especially for a poor person ever respectful of the mystery
of causes.

“He should have been here this hour or more. And so should my fly-away daughter!”

Chivers surrounded this description of Miss Prodmore with the deep discretion of silence, and then, after a moment,
evidently reflected that silence, in a world bestrewn with traps to irreverence, might be as rash as speech. “Were they
coming — a — together, sir?”

He had scarcely mended the matter, for his visitor gave an inconsequent stare. “Together? — for what do you take
Miss Prodmore?” This young lady’s parent glared about him again as if to alight on something else that was out of
place; but the good intentions expressed in the attitude of every object might presently have been presumed to soothe
his irritation. It had at any rate the effect of bridging, for poor Chivers, some of his gaps. “It is in a
sense true that their ‘coming together,’ as you call it, is exactly what I’ve made my plans for today: my calculation
was that we should all punctually converge on this spot. Attended by her trusty maid, Miss Prodmore, who happens to be
on a week’s visit to her grandmother at Bellborough, was to take the 1.40 from that place. I was to drive over — ten
miles — from the most convenient of my seats. Captain Yule”— the speaker wound up his statement as with the mention of
the last touch in a masterpiece of his own sketching —“was finally to shake off for a few hours the peculiar
occupations that engage him.”

The old man listened with his head askance to favour his good ear, but his visible attention all on a sad spot in
one of the half-dozen worn rugs. “They must be peculiar, sir, when a gentleman comes into a property like this
and goes three months without so much as a nat’ral curiosity —! I don’t speak of anything but what is nat’ral,
sir; but there have been people here —”

“There have repeatedly been people here!” Mr. Prodmore complacently interrupted.

“As you say, sir — to be shown over. With the master himself never shown!” Chivers dismally commented.

“He shall be, so that nobody can miss him!” Mr. Prodmore, for his own reassurance as well, hastened to
retort.

His companion risked a tiny explanation. “It will be a mercy indeed to look on him; but I meant that he has not been
taken round.”

“That’s what I meant too. I’ll take him — round and round: it’s exactly what I’ve come for!” Mr. Prodmore
rang out; and his eyes made the lower circuit again, looking as pleased as such a pair of eyes could look with nobody
as yet quite good enough either to terrify or to tickle. “He can’t fail to be affected, though he has been up
to his neck in such a different class of thing.”

Chivers clearly wondered awhile what class of thing it could be. Then he expressed a timid hope. “In nothing, I dare
say, but what’s right, sir —?”

“In everything,” Mr. Prodmore distinctly informed him, “that’s wrong! But here he is!” that gentleman added with
elation as the doorbell again sounded. Chivers, under the double agitation of the appeal and the disclosure, proceeded
to the front as fast as circumstances allowed; while Mr. Prodmore, left alone, would have been observed — had not his
solitude been so bleak — to recover a degree of cheerfulness. Cheerfulness in solitude at Covering End was certainly
not irresistible, but particular feelings and reasons had pitched, for their campaign, the starched, if now somewhat
ruffled, tent of his large white waistcoat. If they had issued audibly from that pavilion, they would have represented
to us his consciousness of the reinforcement he might bring up for attack should Captain Yule really resist the house.
The sound he next heard from the front caused him none the less, for that matter, to articulate a certain drop. “Only
Cora? — Well,” he added in a tone somewhat at variance with his “only,” “he shan’t, at any rate, resist her!”
This announcement would have quickened a spectator’s interest in the young lady whom Chivers now introduced and
followed, a young lady who straightway found herself the subject of traditionary discipline. “I’ve waited. What do you
mean?”

Cora Prodmore, who had a great deal of colour in her cheeks and a great deal more — a bold variety of kinds — in the
extremely high pitch of her new, smart clothes, meant, on the whole, it was easy to see, very little, and met this
challenge with still less show of support either from the sources I have mentioned or from any others. A dull, fresh,
honest, overdressed damsel of two-and-twenty, she was too much out of breath, too much flurried and frightened, to do
more than stammer: “Waited, papa? Oh, I’m sorry!”

Her regret appeared to strike her father still more as an impertinence than as a vanity. “Would you then, if I had
not had patience for you, have wished not to find me? Why the dickens are you so late?”

Agitated, embarrassed, the girl was at a loss. “I’ll tell you, papa!” But she followed up her pledge with an air of
vacuity and then, dropping into the nearest seat, simply closed her eyes to her danger. If she desired relief, she had
caught at the one way to get it. “I feel rather faint. Could I have some tea?”

Mr. Prodmore considered both the idea and his daughter’s substantial form. “Well, as I shall expect you to put forth
all your powers — yes!” He turned to Chivers. “Some tea.”

The old man’s eyes had attached themselves to Miss Prodmore’s symptoms with more solicitude than those of her
parent. “I did think it might be required!” Then as he gained the door of the morning-room: “I’ll lay it out here.”

The young lady, on his withdrawal, recovered herself sufficiently to rise again. “It was my train, papa — so very
awfully behind. I walked up, you know, also, from the station — there’s such a lovely footpath across the park.”

“You’ve been roaming the country then alone?” Mr. Prodmore inquired.

The girl protested with instant eagerness against any such picture. “Oh, dear no, not alone!” She spoke,
absurdly, as if she had had a train of attendants; but it was an instant before she could complete the assurance.
“There were ever so many people about.”

“Nothing is more possible than that there should be too many!” said her father, speaking as for his
personal convenience, but presenting that as enough. “But where, among them all,” he demanded, “is your trusty
maid?”

Cora’s reply made up in promptitude what it lacked in felicity. “I didn’t bring her.” She looked at the old
portraits as if to appeal to them to help her to remember why. Apparently indeed they gave a sign, for she presently
went on: “She was so extremely unwell.”

Mr. Prodmore met this with reprobation. “Wasn’t she to understand from the first that we don’t permit —”

“Anything of that sort?”— the girl recalled it at least as a familiar law. “Oh, yes, papa — I thought she
did.”

“But she doesn’t?”— Mr. Prodmore pressed the point. Poor Cora, at a loss again, appeared to wonder if the point had
better be a failure of brain or of propriety, but her companion continued to press. “What on earth’s the matter with
her?”

She again communed with their silent witnesses. “I really don’t quite know, but I think that at Granny’s she eats
too much.”

“I’ll soon put an end to that!” Mr. Prodmore returned with decision. “You expect then to pursue your
adventures quite into the night — to return to Bellborough as you came?”

The girl had by this time begun a little to find her feet. “Exactly as I came, papa dear — under the protection of a
new friend I’ve just made, a lady whom I met in the train and who is also going back by the 6.19. She was, like myself,
on her way to this place, and I expected to find her here.”

Mr. Prodmore chilled on the spot any such expectations. “What does she want at this place?”

Cora was clearly stronger for her new friend than for herself. “She wants to see it.”

The effect of her new acquaintance on his companion had been such that she could, after an instant, react against
this sentence. “Well, when I told her that this particular day perhaps wouldn’t, she said it would just have
to.”

“Have to do?” Mr. Prodmore showed again, through a chink, his speculative eye. “For what, then, with such
grand airs?”

“Why, I suppose, for what Americans want.”

He measured the quantity. “They want everything.”

“Then I wonder,” said Cora, “that she hasn’t arrived.”

“When she does arrive,” he answered, “I’ll tackle her; and I shall thank you, in future, not to take up, in trains,
with indelicate women of whom you know nothing.”

“Oh, I did know something,” his daughter pleaded; “for 1 saw her yesterday at Bellborough.”

Mr. Prodmore contested even this freedom. “And what was she doing at Bellborough?”

“Staying at the Blue Dragon, to see the old abbey. She says she just loves old abbeys. It seems to be the same
feeling,” the girl went on, “that brought her over, today, to see this old house.”

“She ‘just loves’ old houses? Then why the deuce didn’t she accompany you properly, since she is so pushing, to the
door?”

“Because she went off in a fly,” Cora explained, “to see, first, the old hospital. She just loves old hospitals. She
asked me if this isn’t a show-house. I told her”— the girl was anxious to disclaim responsibility —“that I hadn’t the
least idea.”

“It is!” Mr. Prodmore cried almost with ferocity. “I wonder, on such a speech, what she thought of
you!”

Cora, oddly enough, seemed almost to court this description. “That I’m not, as she rather funnily called it, a
show-girl.”

“Think of your having to be reminded — by the very strangers you pick up,” Mr. Prodmore groaned, “of what my
daughter should pre-eminently be! Your friend, all the same,” he bethought himself, “is evidently loud.”

“Well, when she comes,” the girl again so far agreed as to reply, “you’ll certainly hear her. But don’t judge her,
papa, till you do. She’s tremendously clever,” she risked —“there seems to be nothing she doesn’t know.”

“And there seems to be nothing you do! You’re not tremendously clever,” Mr. Prodmore pursued; “so you’ll
permit me to demand of you a slight effort of intelligence.” Then, as for the benefit of the listening walls
themselves, he struck the high note. “I’m expecting Captain Yule.”

Cora’s consciousness blinked. “The owner of this property?”

Her father’s tone showed his reserves. “That’s what it depends on you to make him!”

“On me?” the girl gasped.

“He came into it three months ago by the death of his great-uncle, who had lived to ninety-three, but who, having
quarrelled mortally with his father, had always refused to receive either sire or son.”

Our young lady bent her eyes on this page of family history, then raised them but dimly lighted. “But now, at least,
doesn’t he live here?”

“So little,” her companion replied, “that he comes here today for the very first time. I’ve some business to discuss
with him that can best be discussed on this spot; and it’s a vital part of that business that you too should take pains
to make him welcome.”

Miss Prodmore failed to ignite. “In his own house?”

“That it’s not his own house is just the point I seek to make! The way I look at it is that it’s
my house! The way I look at it even, my dear”— in his demonstration of his ways of looking Mr. Prodmore
literally expanded —“is that it’s our house. The whole thing is mortgaged, as it stands, for every penny of
its value; and I’m in the pleasant position — do you follow me?” he trumpeted.

Cora jumped. “Of holding the mortgages?”

He caught her with a smile of approval and indeed of surprise. “You keep up with me better than I hoped. I hold
every scrap of paper, and it’s a precious collection.”

She smothered, perceptibly, a vague female sigh, glancing over the place more attentively than she had yet done. “Do
you mean that you can come down on him?”

“I don’t need to ‘come,’ my dear — I am ‘down.’ This is down!”— and the iron point of Mr.
Prodmore’s stick fairly struck, as he rapped it, a spark from the cold pavement. “I came many weeks ago — commercially
speaking — and haven’t since budged from the place.”

The girl moved a little about the hall, then turned with a spasm of courage. “Are you going to be very hard?”

If she read the eyes with which he met her she found in them, in spite of a certain accompanying show of pleasantry,
her answer. “Hard with you?”

“No — that doesn’t matter. Hard with the Captain.”

Mr. Prodmore thought an instant. “‘Hard’ is a stupid, shuffling term. What do you mean by it?”

“As usual, I have scored; but my advantage won’t be striking perhaps till I have sent the blow home. What 1
appeal to you, as a father, at present to do”— he continued broadly to demonstrate —“is to nerve my arm. I look to you
to see me through.”

“Through what, then?”

“Through this most important transaction. Through the speculation of which you’ve been the barely dissimulated
subject. I’ve brought you here to receive an impression, and I’ve brought you, even more, to make one.”

The girl turned honestly flat. “But on whom?”

“On me, to begin with — by not being a fool. And then, Miss, on him.”

Erect, but as if paralysed, she had the air of facing the worst. “On Captain Yule?”

“By bringing him to the point.”

“But, father,” she asked in evident anguish —“to what point?”

“The point where a gentleman has to.”

Miss Prodmore faltered. “Go down on his knees?”

Her father considered. “No — they don’t do that now.”

“What do they do?”

Mr. Prodmore carried his eyes with a certain sustained majesty to a remote point. “He will know himself.”

“Oh, no, indeed, he won’t,” the girl cried; “they don’t ever!”

“Then the sooner they learn — whoever teaches ’em! — the better: the better I mean in particular,” Mr. Prodmore
added with an intention discernibly vicious, “for the master of this house. I’ll guarantee that he shall understand
that,” he concluded, “for I shall do my part.”

She looked at him as if his part were really to be hated. “But how on earth, sir, can I ever do mine? To begin with,
you know, I’ve never even seen him.”

Mr. Prodmore took out his watch; then, having consulted it, put it back with a gesture that seemed to dispose at the
same time and in the same manner of the objection. “You’ll see him now— from one moment to the other. He’s
remarkably handsome, remarkably young, remarkably ambitious, and remarkably clever. He has one of the best and oldest
names in this part of the country — a name that, far and wide here, one could do so much with that I’m simply indignant
to see him do so little. I propose, my dear, to do with it all he hasn’t, and I further propose, to that end, first to
get hold of it. It’s you, Miss Prodmore, who shall take it out of the fire.”

“The fire?”— he had terrible figures.

“Out of the mud, if you prefer. You must pick it up, do you see? My plan is, in short,” Mr. Prodmore pursued, “that
when we’ve brushed it off and rubbed it down a bit, blown away the dust and touched up the rust, my daughter shall
gracefully bear it.”

She could only oppose, now, a stiff, thick transparency that yielded a view of the course in her own veins, after
all, however, mingled with a feebler fluid, of the passionate blood of the Prodmores. “And pray is it also Captain
Yule’s plan?”

Her father’s face warned her off the ground of irony, but he replied without violence. “His plans have not yet quite
matured. But nothing is more natural,” he added with an ominous smile, “than that they shall do so on the sunny south
wall of Miss Prodmore’s best manner.”

Miss Prodmore’s spirit was visibly rising, and a note that might have meant warning for warning sounded in the laugh
produced by this sally. “You speak of them, papa, as if they were sour little plums! You exaggerate, I think, the
warmth of Miss Prodmore’s nature. It has always been thought remarkably cold.”

“Then you’ll be so good, my dear, as to confound — it mightn’t be amiss even a little to scandalise — that opinion.
I’ve spent twenty years in giving you what your poor mother used to call advantages, and they’ve cost me hundreds and
hundreds of pounds. It’s now time that, both as a parent and as a man of business, I should get my money back. I
couldn’t help your temper,” Mr. Prodmore conceded, “nor your taste, nor even your unfortunate resemblance to the
estimable, but far from ornamental, woman who brought you forth; but I paid out a small fortune that you should have,
damn you, don’t you know? a good manner. You never show it to me, certainly; but do you mean to tell me that, at this
time of day — for other persons — you haven’t got one?”

This pulled our young lady perceptibly up; there was a directness in the argument that was like the ache of old
pinches. “If you mean by ‘other persons’ persons who are particularly civil — well, Captain Yule may not see his way to
be one of them. He may not think— don’t you see? — that I’ve a good manner.”

“Do your duty, Miss, and never mind what he thinks!” Her father’s conception of her duty momentarily sharpened.
“Don’t look at him like a sick turkey, and he’ll be sure to think right.”

The colour that sprang into Cora’s face at this rude comparison was such, unfortunately, as perhaps a little to
justify it. Yet she retained, in spite of her emotion, some remnant of presence of mind. “I remember your saying once,
some time ago, that that was just what he would be sure not to do: I mean when he began to go in for his
dreadful ideas —”

Mr. Prodmore took her boldly up. “About the ‘radical programme,’ the ‘social revolution,’ the spoliation of
everyone, and the destruction of everything? Why, you stupid thing, I’ve worked round to a complete agreement with him.
The taking from those who have by those who haven’t —”

“Well?” said the girl, with some impatience, as he sought the right way of expressing his notion.

“What is it but to receive, from consenting hands, the principal treasure of the rich? If I’m rich, my daughter is
my largest property, and I freely make her over. I shall, in other words, forgive my young friend his low opinions if
he renounces them for you.”

Cora, at this, started as with a glimpse of delight. “He won’t renounce them! He shan’t!”

Her father appeared still to enjoy the ingenious way he had put it, so that he had good humour to spare. “If you
suggest that you’re in political sympathy with him, you mean then that you’ll take him as he is?”

“I won’t take him at all!” she protested with her head very high; but she had no sooner uttered the words than the
sound of the approach of wheels caused her dignity to drop. “A fly? — it must be he!” She turned right and
left, for a retreat or an escape, but her father had already caught her by the wrist. “Surely,” she pitifully panted,
“you don’t want me to bounce on him thus?”

Mr. Prodmore, as he held her, estimated the effect. “Your frock won’t do — with what it cost me?”

“It’s not my frock, papa — it’s his thinking I’ve come here for him to see me!”

He let her go and, as she moved away, had another look for the social value of the view of her stout back. It
appeared to determine him, for, with a touch of mercy, he passed his word. “He doesn’t think it, and he shan’t know
it.”

The girl had made for the door of the morning-room, before reaching which she flirted breathlessly round. “But he
knows you want me to hook him!”

Mr. Prodmore was already in the parliamentary attitude the occasion had suggested to him for the reception of his
visitor. “The way to ‘hook’ him will be not to be hopelessly vulgar. He doesn’t know that you know anything.” The
house-bell clinked, and he waved his companion away. “Await us there with tea, and mind you toe the mark!”

Chivers, at this moment, summoned by the bell, reappeared in the morning-room doorway, and Cora’s dismay brushed him
as he sidled past her and off into the passage to the front. Then, from the threshold of her refuge, she launched a
last appeal. “Don’t kill me, father: give me time!” With which she dashed into the room, closing the door with
a bang.

2

Mr. Prodmore, in Chivers’s absence, remained staring as if at a sudden image of something rather
fine. His child had left with him the sense of a quick irradiation, and he failed to see why, at the worst, such
lightnings as she was thus able to dart shouldn’t strike somewhere. If he had spoken to her of her best manner perhaps
that was her best manner. He heard steps and voices, however, and immediately invited to his aid his own,
which was simply magnificent. Chivers, returning, announced solemnly “Captain Yule!” and ushered in a tall young man in
a darkish tweed suit and a red necktie, attached in a sailor’s knot, who, as he entered, removed a soft brown hat. Mr.
Prodmore, at this, immediately saluted him by uncovering. “Delighted at last to see you here!”

It was the young man who first, in his comparative simplicity, put out a hand. “If I’ve not come before, Mr.
Prodmore, it was — very frankly speaking — from the dread of seeing you!” His speech contradicted, to some
extent, his gesture, but Clement Yule’s was an aspect in which contradictions were rather remarkably at home. Erect and
slender, but as strong as he was straight, he was set up, as the phrase is, like a soldier, and yet finished, in
certain details — matters of expression and suggestion only indeed — like a man in whom sensibility had been recklessly
cultivated. He was hard and fine, just as he was sharp and gentle, just as he was frank and shy, just as he was serious
and young, just as he looked, though you could never have imitated it, distinctly “kept up” and yet considerably
reduced. His features were thoroughly regular, but his complete shaving might have been designed to show that they
were, after all, not absurd. The face Mr. Prodmore offered him fairly glowed, on this new showing, with instant pride
of possession, and there was that in Captain Yule’s whole air which justified such a sentiment without consciously
rewarding it.

“Ah, surely,” said the elder man, “my presence is not without a motive!”

“It’s just the motive,” Captain Yule returned, “that makes me wince at it! Certainly I’ve no illusions,” he added,
“about the ground of our meeting. Your thorough knowledge of what you’re about has placed me at your mercy — you hold
me in the hollow of your hand.”

It was vivid in every inch that Mr. Prodmore’s was a nature to expand in the warmth, or even in the chill, of any
tribute to his financial subtlety. “Well, I won’t, on my side, deny that when, in general, I go in deep I don’t go in
for nothing. I make it pay double!” he smiled.

“You make it pay so well —‘double’ surely doesn’t do you justice! — that, if I’ve understood you, you can do quite
as you like with this preposterous place. Haven’t you brought me down exactly that I may see you do it?”

“I’ve certainly brought you down that you may open your eyes!” This, apparently, however, was not what Mr. Prodmore
himself had arrived to do with his own. These fine points of expression literally contracted with intensity. “Of
course, you know, you can always clear the property. You can pay off the mortgages.”

Captain Yule, by this time, had, as he had not done at first, looked up and down, round about and well over the
scene, taking in, though at a mere glance, it might have seemed, more particularly, the row, high up, of strenuous
ancestors. But Mr. Prodmore’s last words rang none the less on his ear, and he met them with mild amusement. “Pay off
—? What can I pay off with?”

“You can always raise money.”

“What can I raise it on?”

Mr. Prodmore looked massively gay. “On your great political future.”

“Oh, I’ve not taken — for the short run at least — the lucrative line,” the young man said, “and I know what you
think of that.”

Mr. Prodmore’s blandness confessed, by its instant increase, to this impeachment. There was always the glory of
intimacy in Yule’s knowing what he thought. “I hold that you keep, in public, very dangerous company; but I also hold
that you’re extravagant mainly because you’ve nothing at stake. A man has the right opinions,” he developed with
pleasant confidence, “as soon as he has something to lose by having the wrong. Haven’t I already hinted to you how to
set your political house in order? You drop into the lower regions because you keep the best rooms empty. You’re a
firebrand, in other words my dear Captain, simply because you’re a bachelor. That’s one of the early complaints we all
pass through, but it’s soon over, and the treatment for it quite simple. I have your remedy.”

The young man’s eyes, wandering again about the house, might have been those of an auditor of the fiddling before
the rise of the curtain. “A remedy worse than the disease?”

Clement Yule, for a little, never stirred, save that his eyes yet again strayed vaguely. At last they stopped with a
smile. “Of course I could do that in a moment!”

“It’s even just my own danger from you,” his companion returned. “I perfectly recognise that any woman would now
jump —”

“I don’t like jumping women,” Captain Yule threw in; “but that perhaps is a detail. It’s more to the point that I’ve
yet to see the woman whom, by an advance of my own —”

“You’d care to keep in the really attractive position —?”

“Which can never, of course, be anything”— Yule took his friend up again —“but that of waiting quietly.”

“Never, never anything!” Mr. Prodmore, most assentingly, banished all other thought. “But I haven’t asked you, you
know, to make an advance.”

“You’ve only asked me to receive one?”

Mr. Prodmore waited a little. “Well, I’ve asked you — I asked you a month ago — to think it all over.”

“I have thought it all over,” Clement Yule said; “and the strange sequel seems to be that my eyes have got
accustomed to my darkness. I seem to make out, in the gloom of my meditations, that, at the worst, I can let the whole
thing slide.”

“The property?”— Mr. Prodmore jerked back as if it were about to start.

“Isn’t it the property,” his visitor inquired, “that positively throws me up? If I can afford neither to live on it
nor to disencumber it, I can at least let it save its own bacon and pay its own debts. I can say to you simply: ‘Take
it, my dear sir, and the devil take you!’”

Mr. Prodmore gave a quick, strained smile. “You wouldn’t be so shockingly rude!”

“Why not — if I’m a firebrand and a keeper of low company and a general nuisance? Sacrifice for sacrifice, that
might very well be the least!”

This was put with such emphasis that Mr. Prodmore was for a moment arrested. He could stop very short, however, and
yet talk as still going. “How do you know, if you haven’t compared them? It’s just to make the comparison — in all the
proper circumstances — that you’re here at this hour.” He took, with a large, though vague, exhibitory gesture, a few
turns about. “Now that you stretch yourself — for an hour’s relaxation and rocked, as it were, by my friendly hand — in
the ancient cradle of your race, can you seriously entertain the idea of parting with such a venerable family
relic?”

It was evident that, as he decorously embraced the scene, the young man, in spite of this dissuasive tone, was
entertaining ideas. It might have appeared at the moment to a spectator in whom fancy was at all alert that the place,
becoming in a manner conscious of the question, felt itself on its honour, and that its honour could make no
compromise. It met Clement Yule with no grimace of invitation, with no attenuation of its rich old sadness. It was as
if the two hard spirits, the grim genius loci and the quick modern conscience, stood
an instant confronted. “The cradle of my race bears, for me, Mr. Prodmore, a striking resemblance to its tomb.” The
sigh that dropped from him, however, was not quite void of tenderness. It might, for that matter, have been a long, sad
creak, portending collapse, of some immemorial support of the Yules. “Heavens, how melancholy —!”

Mr. Prodmore, somewhat ambiguously, took up the sound. “Melancholy?”— he just balanced. That well might be, even a
little should be — yet agreement might depreciate.

“Musty, mouldy;” then with a poke of his stick at a gap in the stuff with which an old chair was covered, “mangy!”
Captain Yule responded. “Is this the character throughout?”

Mr. Prodmore fixed a minute the tell-tale tatter. “You must judge for yourself — you must go over the house.” He
hesitated again; then his indecision vanished — the right line was clear. “It does look a bit run down, but I’ll tell
you what I’ll do. I’ll do it up for you — neatly: I’ll throw that in!”

His young friend turned on him an eye that, though markedly enlivened by his offer, was somehow only the more
inscrutable. “Will you put in the electric light?”

Mr. Prodmore’s own twinkle — at this touch of a spring he had not expected to work — was, on the other hand,
temporarily veiled. “Well, if you’ll meet me half-way! We’re dealing here”— he backed up his gravity —“with
fancy-values. Don’t you feel,” he appealed, “as you take it all in, a kind of a something-or-other down your back?”

Clement Yule gazed awhile at one of the pompous quarterings in the faded old glass that, in tones as of late autumn,
crowned with armorial figures the top of the great hall-window; then with abruptness he turned away. “Perhaps I
don’t take it all in; but what I do feel is — since you mention it — a sort of stiffening of the spine! The
whole thing is too queer — too cold — too cruel.”

“Cruel?”— Mr. Prodmore’s demur was virtuous.

“Like the face of some stuck-up distant relation who won’t speak first. I see in the stare of the old dragon, I
taste in his very breath, all the helpless mortality he has tucked away!”

“Lord, sir — you have fancies!” Mr. Prodmore was almost scandalised.

But the young man’s fancies only multiplied as he moved, not at all critical, but altogether nervous, from object to
object. “I don’t know what’s the matter — but there is more here than meets the eye.” He tried as for his
amusement or his relief to figure it out. “I miss the old presences. I feel the old absences. I hear the old voices. I
see the old ghosts.”

This last was a profession that offered some common ground. “The old ghosts, Captain Yule,” his companion promptly
replied, “are worth so much a dozen, and with no reduction, I must remind you — with the price indeed rather raised —
for the quantity taken!” Feeling then apparently that he had cleared the air a little by this sally, Mr. Prodmore
proceeded to pat his interlocutor on a back that he by no means wished to cause to be put to the wall. “Look about you,
at any rate, a little more.” He crossed with his toes well out the line that divides encouragement from patronage. “Do
make yourself at home.”

“Thank you very much, Mr. Prodmore. May I light a cigarette?” his visitor asked.

“In your own house, Captain?”

“That’s just the question: it seems so much less my own house than before I had come into it!” The Captain offered
Mr. Prodmore a cigarette which that gentleman, also taking a light from him, accepted; then he lit his own and began to
smoke. “As I understand you,” he went on, “you lump your two conditions? I mean I must accept both or
neither?”

Mr. Prodmore threw back his shoulders with a high recognition of the long stride represented by this question. “You
will accept both, for, by doing so, you’ll clear the property at a stroke. The way I put it is — see? — that
if you’ll stand for Gossage, you’ll get returned for Gossage.”

“And if I get returned for Gossage, I shall marry your daughter. Accordingly,” the young man pursued, “if I marry
your daughter —”

“I’ll burn up, before your eyes,” said this young lady’s proprietor, “every scratch of your pen. It will be a
bonfire of signatures. There won’t be a penny to pay — there’ll only be a position to take. You’ll take it with
peculiar grace.”

“Peculiar, Mr. Prodmore — very!”

The young man had assented more than he desired, but he was not deterred by it from completing the picture. “You’ll
settle down here in comfort and honour.”

Clement Yule took several steps; the effect of his host was the reverse of soothing; yet the latter watched his
irritation as if it were the working of a charm. “Are you very sure of the ‘honour’ if I turn my political coat?”

“You’ll only be turning it back again to the way it was always worn. Gossage will receive you with open arms and
press you to a heaving Tory bosom. That bosom”— Mr. Prodmore followed himself up —“has never heaved but to sound
Conservative principles. The cradle, as I’ve called it — or at least the rich, warm coverlet — of your race, Gossage
was the political property, so to speak, of generations of your family. Stand therefore in the good old interest and
you’ll stand like a lion.”

“I’m afraid you mean,” Captain Yule laughed, “that I must first roar like one.”

“Oh, I’ll do the roaring!”— and Mr. Prodmore shook his mane. “Leave that to me.”

“Then why the deuce don’t you stand yourself?”

Mr. Prodmore knew so familiarly why! “Because I’m not a remarkably handsome young man with the grand old home and
the right old name. Because I’m a different sort of matter altogether. But if I haven’t these advantages,” he went on,
“you’50 do justice to my natural desire that my daughter at least shall have them.”

Clement Yule watched himself smoke a minute. “Doing justice to natural desires is just what, of late, I’ve tried to
make a study of. But I confess I don’t quite grasp the deep attraction you appear to discover in so large a surrender
of your interests.”

“My surrenders are my own affair,” Mr. Prodmore rang out, “and as for my interests, as I never, on principle, give
anything for nothing, I dare say I may be trusted to know them when I see them. You come high — I don’t for a moment
deny it; but when I look at you, in this pleasant, intimate way, my dear boy — if you’ll allow me so to describe things
— I recognise one of those cases, unmistakeable when really met, in which one must put down one’s money. There’s not an
article in the whole shop, if you don’t mind the comparison, that strikes me as better value. I intend you shall be,
Captain,” Mr. Prodmore wound up in a frank, bold burst, “the true comfort of my life!”

The young man was as hushed for a little as if an organ-tone were still in the air. “May I inquire,” he at last
returned, “if Miss Prodmore’s ideas of comfort are as well defined — and in her case, I may add, as touchingly modest —
as her father’s? Is she a responsible party of this ingenious arrangement?”

Mr. Prodmore rendered homage — his appreciation was marked — to the elevated character of his young friend’s
scruple. “Miss Prodmore, Captain Yule, may be perhaps best described as a large smooth sheet of blank, though
gilt-edged, paper. No image of any tie but the true and perfect filial has yet, I can answer for it, formed itself on
the considerable expanse. But for that image to be projected —”

“I’ve only, in person, to appear?” Yule asked with an embarrassment that he tried to laugh off.

“And, naturally, in person,” Mr. Prodmore intelligently assented, “do yourself, as well as the young lady, justice.
Do you remember what you said when I first, in London, laid the matter before you?”

Clement Yule did remember, but his amusement increased. “I think I said it struck me I should first take a look at —
what do you call it? — the corpus delicti.”

“You should first see for yourself what you had really come into? I was not only eager for that,” said Mr. Prodmore,
“but I’m willing to go further: I’m quite ready to hear you say that you think you should also first see the young
lady.”

Captain Yule continued to laugh. “There is something in that then, since you mention it!”

“I think you’ll find that there’s everything.” Mr. Prodmore again looked at his watch. “Which will you take
first?”

The tone showed a consternation that Mr. Prodmore’s was alert to soothe. “Ah, as long, you know, as you like!”

Yule’s alarm, however, was not assuaged; it appeared to grow as he stared, much discomposed, yet sharply thinking,
at the door to which his friend had pointed. “Oh, longer than this, please!” Then as he turned away: “Do you
mean she knows —?”

“That she’s here on view?” Mr. Prodmore hung fire a moment, but was equal to the occasion. “She knows nothing
whatever. She’s as unconscious as the rose on its stem!”

His companion was visibly relieved. “That’s right — let her remain so! I’ll first take the house,” said Clement
Yule.

“Shall I go round with you?” Mr. Prodmore asked.

The young man’s reflection was brief. “Thank you. I’d rather, on the whole, go round alone.”

The old servant who had admitted the gentlemen came back at this crisis from the morning-room, looking from under a
bent brow and with much limpid earnestness from one of them to the other. The one he first addressed had evidently,
though quite unaware of it, inspired him with a sympathy from which he now took a hint. “There’s tea on, sir!” he
persuasively jerked as he passed the younger man.

The elder answered. “Then I’ll join my daughter.” He gained the morning-room door, whence he repeated with an
appropriate gesture — that of offering proudly, with light, firm fingers, a flower of his own celebrated raising — his
happy formula of Miss Prodmore’s state. “The rose on its stem!” Scattering petals, diffusing fragrance, he thus passed
out.

Chivers, meanwhile, had rather pointlessly settled once more in its place some small object that had not strayed; to
whom Clement Yule, absently watching him, abruptly broke out. “1 say, my friend, what colour is the rose?”

The old man looked up with a dimness that presently glimmered. “The rose, sir?” He turned to the open door and the
shining day. “Rather a brilliant —”

“A brilliant —?” Yule was interested.

“Kind of old-fashioned red.” Chivers smiled with the pride of being thus able to testify, but the next instant his
smile went out. “It’s the only one left — on the old west wall.”

His visitor’s mirth, at this, quickly enough revived. “My dear fellow, I’m not alluding to the sole ornament of the
garden, but to the young lady at present in the morning-room. Do you happen to have noticed if she’s pretty?”

Chivers stood queerly rueful. “Laws, sir — it’s a matter I mostly notice; but isn’t it, at the same time, sir, a
matter — like — of taste?”

“Pre-eminently. That’s just why I appeal with such confidence to yours.”

The old man acknowledged with a flush of real embarrassment a responsibility he had so little invited. “Well, sir —
mine was always a sort of fancy for something more merry-like.”

“She isn’t merry-like then, poor Miss Prodmore?” Captain Yule’s attention, however, dropped before the answer came,
and he turned off the subject with an “Ah, if you come to that, neither am I! But it doesn’t signify,” he went on.
“What are you?” he more sociably demanded.

Chivers clearly had to think a bit. “Well, sir, I’m not quite that. Whatever has there been to make me,
sir?” he asked in dim extenuation.

“How in the world do I know? I mean to whom do you belong?”

Chivers seemed to scan impartially the whole field. “If you could just only tell me, sir! I quite seem to
waste away — for someone to take an order of.”

Clement Yule, by this time, had become aware he was amusing. “Who pays your wages?”

“No one at all, sir,” said the old man very simply.

His friend, fumbling an instant in a waistcoat pocket, produced something that his hand, in obedience to a little
peremptory gesture and by a trick of which he had unlearned, through scant custom, the neatness, though the propriety
was instinctive, placed itself in a shy practical relation to. “Then there’s a sovereign. And I haven’t many!” the
young man, turning away resignedly, threw after it.

Chivers, for an instant, intensely studied him. “Ah, then, shouldn’t it stay in the family?”

Clement Yule wheeled round, first struck, then, at the sight of the figure made by his companion in this offer,
visibly touched. “I think it does, old boy.”

Chivers kept his eyes on him now. “I’ve served your house, sir.”

“How long?”

“All my life.”

So, for a time, they faced each other, and something in Chivers made Yule at last speak. “Then I won’t give
you up!”

“Indeed, sir, I hope you won’t give up anything.”

The Captain took up his hat. “It remains to be seen.” He looked over the place again; his eyes wandered to the open
door. “Is that the garden?”

“It was!”— and the old man’s sigh was like the creak of the wheel of time. “Shall I show you how it used to
be?”

“It’s just as it is, alas, that I happen to require it!” Captain Yule reached the door and stood looking
beyond. “Don’t come,” he then said; “1 want to think.” With which he walked out.

Chivers, left alone, appeared to wonder at it, and his wonder, like that of most old people, lay near his lips.
“What does he want, poor dear, to think about?” This speculation, however, was immediately checked by a high, clear
voice that preceded the appearance on the stairs, before she had reached the middlemost landing, of the wonderful
figure of a lady, a lady who, with the almost trumpeted cheer of her peremptory but friendly call —“Housekeeper,
Butler, old Family Servant!”— fairly waked the sleeping echoes. Chivers gazed up at her in quick remembrance, half
dismayed, half dazzled, of a duty neglected. She appeared now; she shone at him out of the upper dusk; reaching the
middle, she had begun to descend, with beautiful laughter and rustling garments; and though she was alone she gave him
the sense of coming in a crowd and with music. “Oh, I should have told him of her!”

3

She was indeed an apparition, a presence requiring announcement and explanation just in the degree
in which it seemed to show itself in a relation quite of its own to all social preliminaries. It evidently either
assumed them to be already over or wished to forestall them altogether; what was clear at any rate was that it allowed
them scant existence. She was young, tall, radiant, lovely, and dressed in a manner determined at once, obviously, by
the fact and by the humour of her journey — it might have proclaimed her so a pilgrim or so set her up as a priestess.
Most journeys, for this lady, at all events, were clearly a brush of Paris. “Did you think I had got snapped down in an
old box like that poor girl — what’s her name? the one who was poking round too — in the celebrated poem? You dear,
delightful man, why didn’t you tell me?”

“Tell you, mum —?”

“Well, that you’re so perfectly — perfect! You’re ever so much better than anyone has ever said. Why, in the name of
common sense, has nobody ever said anything? You’re everything in the world you ought to be, and not the shade
of a shade of anything you oughtn’t!”

It was a higher character to be turned out with than poor Chivers had ever dreamed. “Well, mum, I try!” he
gaped.

“Oh, no, you don’t — that’s just your charm! I try,” cried his friend, “but you do nothing: here you simply
are— you can’t help it!”

He stood overwhelmed. “Me, mum?”

She took him in at the eyes — she could take everything at once. “Yes, you too, you positive old picture! I’ve seen
the old masters — but you’re the old master!”

“The master — I?” He fairly fell back.

“‘The good and faithful servant’— Rembrandt van Rhyn: with three stars. That’s what you are!” Nothing would
have been more droll to a spectator than her manner of meeting his humbleness, or more charming indeed than the
practical sweetness of her want of imagination of it. “The house is a vision of beauty, and you’re simply worthy of the
house. I can’t say more for you!”

“I find it a bit of a strain, mum,” Chivers candidly replied, “to keep up — fairly to call it — with what you
do say.”

“That’s just what everyone finds it!”— she broke into the happiest laugh. “Yet I haven’t come here to suffer in
silence, you know — to suffer, I mean, from envy and despair.” She was in constant movement, from side to side,
observing, comparing, returning, taking notes while she gossiped and gossiping, too, for remembrance. The intention of
remembrance even had in it, however, some prevision of failure or some alloy of irritation. “You’re so fatally right
and so deadly complete, all the same, that I can really scarcely bear it: with every fascinating feature that I had
already heard of and thought I was prepared for, and ever so many others that, strange to say, I hadn’t and wasn’t, and
that you just spring right at me like a series of things going off. What do you call it,” she asked —“a royal
salute, a hundred guns?”

Her enthusiasm had a bewildering form, but it had by this time warmed the air, and the old man rubbed his hands as
over a fire to which the bellows had been applied. “I saw as soon as you arrived, mum, that you were looking for more
things than ever I heard tell of!”

“Oh, 1 had got you by heart,” she returned, “from books and drawings and photos; I had you in my pocket when I came:
so, you see, as soon as you were so good as to give me my head and let me loose, I knew my way about. It’s all here,
every inch of it,” she competently continued, “and now at last I can do what I want!”

A light of consternation, at this, just glimmered in Chivers’s face. “And pray, mum, what might that be?”

“Why, take you right back with me — to Missoura Top.”

This answer seemed to fix his bewilderment, but he was there for the general convenience.

“Do I understand you, mum, that you require to take me?”

Her particular convenience, on the spot, embraced him, so new and delightful a sense had he suddenly read into her
words. “Do you mean to say you’d come — as the old Family Servant? Then do, you nice real thing: it’s just
what I’m dying for — an old Family Servant! You’re somebody’s else, yes — but everything, over here, is somebody’s
else, and I want, too, a first-rate second-hand one, all ready made, as you are, but not too much done up. You’re the
best 1’ve seen yet, and I wish I could have you packed — put up in paper and bran — as I shall have my old pot there.”
She whisked about, remembering, recovering, eager: “Don’t let me forget my precious pot!” Excited, with quick
transitions, she quite sociably appealed to her companion, who shuffled sympathetically to where, out of harm, the
object had been placed on a table. “Don’t you just love old crockery? That’s awfully sweet old Chelsea.”

He took up the piece with tenderness, though, in his general agitation, not perhaps with all the caution with which,
for daily service, he handled ancient frailties. He at any rate turned on this fresh subject an interested, puzzled
eye. “Where is it I’ve known this very bit — though not to say, as you do, by name?” Suddenly it came to him.
“In the pew-opener’s front parlour!”

“No,” his interlocutress cried, “in the pew-opener’s best bedroom: on the old chest of drawers, you know — with
those ducks of brass handles. I’ve got the handles too — I mean the whole thing; and the brass fender and fire-irons,
and the chair her grandmother died in. Not in the fly,” she added —“it was such a bore that they have to be sent.”

Chivers, with the pot still in his hands, fairly rocked in the high wind of so much confidence and such great
transactions. He had nothing for these, however, but approval. “You did right to take this out, mum, when the fly went
to the stables. Them flymen do be cruel rash with anything that’s delicate.” Of the delicacy of the vessel it now
rested with him to deposit safely again he was by this time so appreciatively aware that in returning with it to its
safe niche he stumbled into some obscure trap literally laid for him by his nervousness. It was the matter of a few
seconds, of a false movement, a knock of the elbow, a gasp, a shriek, a complete little crash. There was the pot on the
pavement, in several pieces, and the clumsy cup-bearer blue with fear. “Mercy on us, mum — I’ve brought shame
on my old grey hairs!”

The little shriek of his companion had smothered itself in the utterance, and the next minute, with the ruin between
them, they were contrastedly face to face. The charming woman, who had already found more voices in the air than anyone
had found before, could, in the happy play of this power, find a poetry in her accident. “Oh, but the way you
take it!” she laughed —“you’re too quaint to live!” She looked at him as if he alone had suffered — as if his
suffering indeed positively added to his charm. “The way you said that now — it’s just the very ‘type’! That’s all I
want of you now — to be the very type. It’s what you are, you poor dear thing — for you can’t help
it; and it’s what everything and everyone else is, over here; so that you had just better all make up your minds to it
and not try to shirk it. There was a type in the train with me — the ‘awfully nice girl’ of all the English novels, the
‘simple maiden in her flower’ of — who is it? — your great poet. She couldn’t help it either — in fact I
wouldn’t have let her!” With this, while Chivers picked up his fragments, his lady had a happy recall. His
face, as he stood there with the shapeless elements of his humiliation fairly rattling again in his hands, was a
reflection of her extraordinary manner of enlarging the subject, or rather, more beneficently perhaps, the space that
contained it. “By the way, the girl was coming right here. Has she come?”

Chivers crept solemnly away, as if to bury his dead, which he consigned, with dumb rites, to a situation of
honourable publicity; then, as he came back, he replied without elation: “Miss Prodmore is here, mum. She’s having her
tea.”

This, for his friend, was a confirmatory touch to be fitted with eagerness into the picture. “Yes, that’s exactly it
— they’re always having their tea!”

“With Mr. Prodmore — in the morning-room,” the old man supplemented. “Captain Yule’s in the garden.”

“Captain Yule?”

“The new master. He’s also just arrived.”

The wonderful lady gave an immediate “Oh!” to the effect of which her silence for another moment seemed to add. “She
didn’t tell me about him.”

“Well, mum,” said Chivers, “it do be a strange thing to tell. He had never — like, mum — so much as seen the
place.”

“Before today — his very own?” This too, for the visitor, was an impression among impressions, and, like most of her
others, it ended after an instant as a laugh. “Well, I hope he likes it!”

“I haven’t seen many, mum,” Chivers boldly declared, “that like it as much as you.”

She made with her handsome head a motion that appeared to signify still deeper things than he had caught. Her
beautiful wondering eyes played high and low, like the flight of an imprisoned swallow, then, as she sank upon a seat,
dropped at last as if the creature were bruised with its limits. “I should like it still better if it were my
very own!”

“Well, mum,” Chivers sighed, “if it wasn’t against my duty I could wish indeed it were! But the Captain, mum,” he
conscientiously added, “is the lawful heir.”

It was a wonder what she found in whatever he said; he touched with every word the spring of her friendly joy.
“That’s another of your lovely old things — I adore your lawful heirs!” She appeared to have, about everything that
came up, a general lucid vision that almost glorified the particular case. “He has come to take possession?”

Chivers accepted, for the credit of the house, this sustaining suggestion. “He’s a-taking of it now.”

This evoked, for his companion, an instantaneous show. “What does he do and how does he do it? Can’t I
see?” She was all impatience, but she dropped to disappointment as her guide looked blank. “There’s no grand
fuss —?”

“I scarce think him, mum,” Chivers with propriety hastened to respond, “the gentleman to make any about
anything.”

She had to resign herself, but she smiled as she thought. “Well, perhaps I like them better when they don’t!” She
had clearly a great range of taste, and it all came out in the wistfulness with which, before the notice apparently
served on her, she prepared to make way. “I also”— she lingered and sighed —“have taken possession!”

She sadly shook her head. “Ah, but for a poor little hour! He’s for life.”

The old man gave up, after a little, with equal depression, the pretence of dealing with such realities. “For mine,
mum, I do at least hope.”

She made again the circuit of the great place, picking up without interest the jacket she had on her previous
entrance laid down. “I shall think of you, you know, here together.” She vaguely looked about her as for anything else
to take; then abruptly, with her eyes again on Chivers: “Do you suppose he’ll be kind to you?”

His hand, in his trousers-pocket, seemed to turn the matter over. “He has already been, mum.”

“Then be sure to be so to him!” she replied with some emphasis. The house-bell sounded as she spoke, giving
her quickly another thought. “Is that his bell?”

Chivers was hardly less struck. “I must see whose!”— and hurrying, on this, to the front, he presently again
vanished.

His companion, left alone, stood a minute with an air in which happy possession was oddly and charmingly mingled
with desperate surrender; so much as to have left you in doubt if the next of her lively motions were curiosity or
disgust. Impressed, in her divided state, with a small framed plaque of enamel, she impulsively detached it from the
wall and examined it with hungry tenderness. Her hovering thought was so vivid that you might almost have traced it in
sound. “Why, bless me if it isn’t Limoges! I wish awfully I were a bad woman: then, I do devoutly hope, I’d
just quietly take it!” It testified to the force of this temptation that on hearing a sound behind her she started like
a guilty thing; recovering herself, however, and — just, of course, not to appear at fault — keeping the object
familiarly in her hand as she jumped to a recognition of the gentleman who, coming in from the garden, had stopped in
the open doorway. She gathered indeed from his being there a positive advantage, the full confidence of which was
already in her charming tone. “Oh, Captain Yule, I’m delighted to meet you! It’s such a comfort to ask you if I
may!”

His surprise kept him an instant dumb, but the effort not too closely to betray it appeared in his persuasive
inflection. “If you ‘may,’ madam —?”

“Why, just be here, don’t you know? and poke round!” She presented such a course as almost vulgarly
natural. “Don’t tell me I can’t now, because I already have: I’ve been upstairs and downstairs and in my
lady’s chamber — I won’t answer for it even perhaps that I’ve not been in my lord’s! I got round your lovely servant —
if you don’t look out I’ll grab him. If you don’t look out, you know, I’ll grab everything.” She gave fair notice and
went on with amazing serenity; she gathered positive gaiety from his frank stupefaction. “That’s what I came over for —
just to lay your country waste. Your house is a wild old dream; and besides”— she dropped, oddly and quaintly, into
real responsible judgment —“you’ve got some quite good things. Oh, yes, you have— several: don’t coyly pretend
you haven’t!” Her familiarity took these flying leaps, and she alighted, as her victim must have phrased it to himself,
without turning a hair. “Don’t you know you have? Just look at that!” She thrust her enamel before him, but he
took it and held it so blankly, with an attention so absorbed in the mere woman, that at the sight of his manner her
zeal for his interest and her pity for his detachment again flashed out. “Don’t you know anything? Why, it’s
Limoges!”

Clement Yule simply broke into a laugh — though his laugh indeed was comprehensive. “It seems absurd, but I’m not in
the least acquainted with my house. I’ve never happened to see it.”

She seized his arm. “Then do let me show it to you!”

“I shall be delighted.” His laughter had redoubled in a way that spoke of his previous tension; yet his tone, as he
saw Chivers return breathless from the front, showed that he had responded sincerely enough to desire a clear field.
“Who in the world’s there?”

The old man was full of it. “A party!”

“A party?”

Chivers confessed to the worst. “Over from Gossage — to see the house.”

The worst, however, clearly, was quite good enough for their companion, who embraced the incident with sudden
enthusiasm. “Oh, let me show it!” But before either of the men could reply she had, addressing herself to
Chivers, one of those droll drops that betrayed the quickness of her wit and the freedom of her fancy. “Dear me, I
forgot —you get the tips! But, you dear old creature,” she went on, “I’ll get them, too, and I’ll simply make
them over to you.” She again pressed Yule — pressed him into this service. “Perhaps they’ll be bigger — for me!”

He continued to be highly amused. “I should think they’d be enormous — for you! But I should like,” he
added with more concentration —“I should like extremely, you know, to go over with you alone.”

She was held a moment. “Just you and me?”

“Just you and me — as you kindly proposed.”

She stood reminded; but, throwing it off, she had her first inconsequence. “That must be for after —!”

“Ah, but not too late.” He looked at his watch. “I go back tonight.”

“Laws, sir!” Chivers irrepressibly groaned.

“You want to keep him?” the stranger asked. Captain Yule turned away at the question, but her look went after him,
and she found herself, somehow, instantly answered. “Then I’ll help you,” she said to Chivers; “and the oftener we go
over the better.”

Something further, on this, quite immaterial, but quite adequate, passed, while the young man’s back was turned,
between the two others; in consequence of which Chivers again appealed to his master. “Shall I show them straight in,
sir?”

His master, still detached, replied without looking at him. “By all means — if there’s money in it!” This was
jocose, but there would have been, for an observer, an increase of hope in the old man’s departing step. The lady had
exerted an influence.

She continued, for that matter, with a start of genial remembrance, to exert one in his absence. “Oh, and I promised
to show it to Miss Prodmore!” Her conscience, with a kind smile for the young person she named, put the question to
Clement Yule. “Won’t you call her?”

The coldness of his quick response made it practically none. “‘Call’ her? Dear lady, I don’t know her!”

“You must, then — she’s wonderful.” The face with which he met this drew from the dear lady a sharper look; but, for
the aid of her good-nature, Cora Prodmore, at the moment she spoke, presented herself in the doorway of the
morning-room. “See? She’s charming!” The girl, with a glare of recognition, dashed across the open as if under heavy
fire; but heavy fire, alas — the extremity of exposure — was promptly embodied in her friend’s public embrace. “Miss
Prodmore,” said this terrible friend, “let me present Captain Yule.” Never had so great a gulf been bridged in so free
a span. “Captain Yule, Miss Prodmore. Miss Prodmore, Captain Yule.”

There was stiffness, the cold mask of terror, in such notice as either party took of this demonstration, the
convenience of which was not enhanced for the divided pair by the perception that Mr. Prodmore had now followed his
daughter. Cora threw herself confusedly into it indeed, as with a vain rebound into the open. “Papa, let me ‘present’
you to Mrs. Gracedew. Mrs. Gracedew, Mr. Prodmore. Mr. Prodmore, Mrs. Gracedew.”

Mrs. Gracedew, with a free salute and a distinct repetition, took in Mr. Prodmore as she had taken everything else.
“Mr. Prodmore”— oh, she pronounced him, spared him nothing of himself. “So happy to meet your daughter’s father. Your
daughter’s so perfect a specimen.”

Mr. Prodmore, for the first moment, had simply looked large and at sea; then, like a practical man and without more
question, had quickly seized the long perch held out to him in this statement. “So perfect a specimen, yes!”— he seemed
to pass it on to his young friend.

Mrs. Gracedew, if she observed his emphasis, drew from it no deterrence; she only continued to cover Cora with a
gaze that kept her well in the middle. “So fresh, so quaint, so droll!”

It was apparently a result of what had passed in the morning-room that Mr. Prodmore had grasped afresh the need for
effective action, which he clearly felt he did something to meet in clutching precipitately the helping hand popped so
suddenly out of space, yet so beautifully gloved and so pressingly and gracefully brandished. “So fresh, so quaint, so
droll!”— he again gave Captain Yule the advantage of the stranger’s impression.

To what further appreciation this might have prompted the lady herself was not, however, just then manifest; for the
return of Chivers had been almost simultaneous with the advance of the Prodmores, and it had taken place with forms
that made it something of a circumstance. There was positive pomp in the way he preceded several persons of both sexes,
not tourists at large, but simple sightseers of the half-holiday order, plain provincial folk already, on the spot,
rather awestruck. The old man, with suppressed pulls and prayers, had drawn them up in a broken line, and the habit of
more peopled years, the dull drone of the dead lesson, sounded out in his prompt beginning. The party stood close, in
this manner, on one side of the apartment, while the master of the house and his little circle were grouped on the
other. But as Chivers, guiding his squad, reached the centre of the space, Mrs. Gracedew, markedly moved, quite
unreservedly engaged, came slowly forward to meet him. “This, ladies and gentlemen,” he mechanically quavered, “is
perhaps the most important feature — the grand old feudal, baronial ’all. Being, from all accounts, the most ancient
portion of the edifice, it was erected in the very earliest ages.” He paused a moment, to mark his effect, then gave a
little cough which had become, obviously, in these great reaches of time, an essential part of the trick. “Some do
say,” he dispassionately remarked, “in the course of the fifteenth century.”

Mrs. Gracedew, who had visibly thrown herself into the working of the charm, following him with vivid sympathy and
hanging on his lips, took the liberty, at this, of quite affectionately pouncing on him. “I say in the
fourteenth, my dear — you’re robbing us of a hundred years!”

Her victim yielded without a struggle. “I do seem, in them dark old centuries, sometimes to trip a little.” Yet the
interruption of his ancient order distinctly discomposed him, all the more that his audience, gaping with a sense of
the importance of the fine point, moved in its mass a little nearer. Thus put upon his honour, he endeavoured to
address the group with a dignity undiminished. “The Gothic roof is much admired, but the west gallery is a modern
addition.”

His discriminations had the note of culture, but his candour, all too promptly, struck Mrs. Gracedew as excessive.
“What in the name of Methuselah do you call ‘modern’? It was here at the visit of James the First, in 1611, and is
supposed to have served, in the charming detail of its ornament, as a model for several that were constructed in his
reign. The great fireplace,” she handsomely conceded, “is Jacobean.”

She had taken him up with such wondrous benignant authority — as if, for her life, if they were to have it,
she couldn’t help taking care that they had it out; she had interposed with an assurance that so converted her — as by
the wave of a great wand, the motion of one of her own free arms — from mere passive alien to domesticated dragon, that
poor Chivers could only assent with grateful obeisances. She so plunged into the old book that he had quite lost his
place. The two gentlemen and the young lady, moreover, were held there by the magic of her manner. His own, as he
turned again to his cluster of sightseers, took refuge in its last refinement. “The tapestry on the left Italian — the
elegant wood-work Flemish.”

Mrs. Gracedew was upon him again. “Excuse me if I just deprecate a misconception. The elegant wood-work Italian —
the tapestry on the left Flemish.” Suddenly she put it to him before them all, pleading as familiarly and gaily as she
had done when alone with him, and looking now at the others, all round, gentry and poor folk alike, for sympathy and
support. She had an idea that made her dance. “Do you really mind if I just do it? Oh, I know how: I can do
quite beautifully the housekeeper last week at Castle Gaunt.” She fraternised with the company as if it were a game
they must play with her, though this first stage sufficiently hushed them. “How do you do? Ain’t it thrilling?” Then
with a laugh as free as if, for a disguise, she had thrown her handkerchief over her head or made an apron of her
tucked-up skirt, she passed to the grand manner. “Keep well together, please — we’re not doing puss-in-the-corner. I’ve
my duty to all parties — I can’t be partial to one!”

The contingent from Gossage had, after all, like most contingents, its spokesman — a very erect little personage in
a very new suit and a very green necktie, with a very long face and upstanding hair. It was on an evident sense of
having been practically selected for encouragement that he, in turn, made choice of a question which drew all eyes.
“How many parties, now, can you manage?”

Mrs. Gracedew was superbly definite. “Two. The party up and the party down.” Chivers gasped at the way she dealt
with this liberty, and his impression was conspicuously deepened as she pointed to one of the escutcheons in the high
hall-window. “Observe in the centre compartment the family arms.” She did take his breath away, for before he knew it
she had crossed with the lightest but surest of gestures to the black old portrait, on the opposite wall, of a
long-limbed gentleman in white trunk-hose. “And observe the family legs!” Her method was wholly her own, irregular and
broad; she flew, familiarly, from the pavement to the roof and then dropped from the roof to the pavement as if the
whole air of the place were an element in which she floated. “Observe the suit of armour worn at Tewkesbury — observe
the tattered banner carried at Blenheim.” They bobbed their heads wherever she pointed, but it would have come home to
any spectator that they saw her alone. This was the case quite as much with the opposite trio — the case especially
with Clement Yule, who indeed made no pretence of keeping up with her signs. It was the signs themselves he looked at —
not at the subjects indicated. But he never took his eyes from her, and it was as if, at last, she had been peculiarly
affected by a glimpse of his attention. All her own, for a moment, frankly went back to him and was immediately
determined by it. “Observe, above all, that you’re in one of the most interesting old houses, of its type, in England;
for which the ages have been tender and the generations wise: letting it change so slowly that there’s always more left
than taken — living their lives in it, but letting it shape their lives!”

Though this pretty speech had been unmistakeably addressed to the younger of the temporary occupants of Covering
End, it was the elder who, on the spot, took it up. “A most striking and appropriate tribute to a real historical
monument!” Mr. Prodmore had a natural ease that could deal handsomely with compliments, and he manifestly, moreover,
like a clever man, saw even more in such an explosion of them than fully met the ear. “You do, madam, bring the whole
thing out!”

The visitor who had already with such impunity ventured had, on this, a loud renewal of boldness, but for the
benefit of a near neighbour. “Doesn’t she indeed, Jane, bring it out?”

Mrs. Gracedew, with a friendly laugh, caught the words in their passage. “But who in the world wants to keep it
in? It isn’t a secret — it isn’t a strange cat or a political party!” The housekeeper, as she talked, had
already dropped from her; her sense of the place was too fresh for control, though instead of half an hour it might
have taken six months to become so fond. She soared again, at random, to the noble spring of the roof. “Just look at those lovely lines!” They all looked, all but Clement Yule, and several of the larger
company, subdued, overwhelmed, nudged each other with strange sounds. Wherever she turned Mrs. Gracedew appeared to
find a pretext for breaking out. “Just look at the tone of that glass, and the gilding of that leather, and the cutting
of that oak, and the dear old flags of the very floor.” It came back, came back easily, her impulse to appeal to the
lawful heir, and she seemed, with her smile of universal intelligence, just to demand the charity of another moment for
it. “To look, in this place, is to love!”

A voice from the party she had in hand took it up with an artless guffaw that resounded more than had doubtless been
meant and that, at any rate, was evidently the accompaniment of some private pinch applied to one of the ladies. “I
say— to love!”

It was one of the ladies who very properly replied. “It depends on who you look at!”

Mr. Prodmore, in the geniality of the hour, made his profit of the simple joke. “Do you hear that, Captain?
You must look at the right person!”

Mrs. Gracedew certainly had not been looking at the wrong one. “I don’t think Captain Yule cares. He doesn’t do
justice —!”

Though her face was still gay, she had faltered, which seemed to strike the young man even more than if she had gone
on. “To what, madam?”

Well, on the chance she let him have it. “To the value of your house.”

He took it beautifully. “I like to hear you express it!”

“I can’t express it!” She once more looked all round, and so much more gravely than she had yet done that
she might have appeared in trouble. She tried but, with a sigh, broke down. “It’s too inexpressible!”

This was a view of the case to which Mr. Prodmore, for his own reasons, was not prepared to assent. Expression and
formulation were what he naturally most desired, and he had just encountered a fountain of these things that he
couldn’t prematurely suffer to fail him. “Do what you can for it, madam. It would bring it quite home.”

Thus excited, she gave with sudden sombre clearness another try. “Well — the value’s a fancy value!”

Mr. Prodmore, receiving it as more than he could have hoped, turned triumphant to his young friend. “Exactly what I
told you!”

Mrs. Gracedew explained indeed as if Mr. Prodmore’s triumph was not perhaps exactly what she had argued for. Still,
the truth was too great. “When a thing’s unique, it’s unique!”

That was every bit Mr. Prodmore required. “It’s unique!”

This met, moreover, the perception of the gentleman in the green necktie. “It’s unique!” They all, in fact,
demonstratively — almost vociferously now — caught the point.

Mrs. Gracedew, finding herself so sustained, and still with her eyes on the lawful heirs, put it yet more strongly.
“It’s worth anything you like.”

What was this but precisely what Mr. Prodmore had always striven to prove? “Anything you like!” he richly
reverberated.

The pleasant discussion and the general interest seemed to bring them all together. “Twenty thousand now?” one of
the gentlemen from Gossage archly inquired — a very young gentleman with an almost coaxing voice, who blushed immensely
as soon as he had spoken.

He blushed still more at the way Mrs. Gracedew faced him. “I wouldn’t look at twenty thousand!”

Mr. Prodmore, on the other hand, was proportionately uplifted. “She wouldn’t look at twenty thousand!” he announced
with intensity to the Captain.

The visitor who had been the first to speak gave a shrewder guess. “Thirty, then, as it stands?”

Mrs. Gracedew looked more and more responsible; she communed afresh with the place; but she too evidently had her
conscience. “It would be giving it away!”

Mr. Prodmore, at this, could scarcely contain himself. “It would be giving it away!”

The second speaker had meanwhile conceived the design of showing that, though still crimson, he was not ashamed.
“You’d hold out for forty —?”

Mrs. Gracedew required a minute to answer — a very marked minute during which the whole place, pale old portraits
and lurking old echoes and all, might have made you feel how much depended on her; to the degree that the consciousness
in her face became finally a reason for her not turning it to Gossage. “Fifty thousand, Captain Yule, is what I think I
should propose.”

If the place had seemed to listen it might have been the place that, in admiring accents from the gentleman with the
green tie, took up the prodigious figure. “Fifty thousand pound!”

It was echoed in a high note from the lady he had previously addressed. “Fifty thousand!”

Yet it was Mr. Prodmore who caught it up loudest and appeared to make it go furthest. “Fifty thousand — fifty
thousand!” Mrs. Gracedew had put him in such spirits that he found on the spot, indicating to her his young friend,
both the proper humour and the proper rigour for any question of what anyone might “propose.” “He’ll never part with
the dear old home!”

Mrs. Gracedew could match at least the confidence. “Then I’ll go over it again while I have the chance.” Her own
humour enjoined that she should drop into the housekeeper, in the perfect tone of which character she addressed herself
once more to the party. “We now pass to the grand staircase.” She gathered her band with a brave gesture, but before
she had fairly impelled them to the ascent she heard herself rather sharply challenged by Captain Yule, who, during the
previous scene, had uttered no sound, yet had remained as attentive as he was impenetrable. “Please let them pass
without you!”

She was taken by surprise. “And stay here with you?”

“If you’ll be so good. I want to speak to you.” Turning then to Chivers and frowning on the party, he delivered
himself for the first time as a person in a position. “For God’s sake, remove them!”

The old man, at this blast of impatience, instantly fluttered forward. “We now pass to the grand staircase.”

They all passed, Chivers covering their scattered ascent as a shepherd scales a hillside with his flock; but it
became evident during the manœuvre that Cora Prodmore was quite out of tune. She had been standing beyond and rather
behind Captain Yule; but she now moved quickly round and reached her new friend’s right. “Mrs. Gracedew, may I
speak to you?”

Her father, before the reply could come, had taken up the place. “After Captain Yule, my dear.” He was in a
state of positively polished lucidity. “You must make the most — don’t you see? — of the opportunity of the
others!”

He waved her to the staircase as one who knew what he was about, but, while the young man, turning his back, moved
consciously and nervously away, the girl renewed her effort to provoke Mrs. Gracedew to detain her. It happened, to her
sorrow, that this lady appeared for the moment, to the detriment of any free attention, to be absorbed in Captain
Yule’s manner; so that Cora could scarce disengage her without some air of invidious reference to it. Recognising as
much, she could only for two seconds, but with great yearning, parry her own antagonist. “She’ll help me, I
think, papa!”

“That’s exactly what strikes me, love!” he cheerfully replied. “But I’ll help you too!” He gave her, toward
the stairs, a push proportioned both to his authority and to her weight; and while she reluctantly climbed in the wake
of the visitors, he laid on Mrs. Gracedew’s arm, with a portentous glance at Captain Yule, a hand of commanding
significance. “Just pile it on!”

Her attention came back — she seemed to see. “He doesn’t like it?”

“Not half enough. Bring him round.”

Her eyes rested again on their companion, who had fidgeted further away and who now, with his hands in his pockets
and unaware of this private passage, stood again in the open doorway and gazed into the grey court. Something in the
sight determined her. “I’ll bring him round.”

But at this moment Cora, pausing half-way up, sent down another entreaty. “Mrs. Gracedew, will you see
me?”

The charming woman looked at her watch. “In ten minutes,” she smiled back.

Mr. Prodmore, bland and assured, looked at his own. “You could put him through in five — but I’ll allow you twenty.
There!” he decisively cried to his daughter, whom he quickly rejoined and hustled on her course. Mrs. Gracedew kissed
after her a hand of vague comfort.

4

The silence that reigned between the pair might have been registered as embarrassing had it lasted a
trifle longer. Yule had continued to turn his back, but he faced about, though he was distinctly grave, in time to
avert an awkwardness. “How do you come to know so much about my house?”

She was as distinctly not grave. “How do you come to know so little?”

“It’s not my fault,” he said very gently. “A particular combination of misfortunes has forbidden me, till this hour,
to come within a mile of it.”

These words evidently struck her as so exactly the right ones to proceed from the lawful heir that such a felicity
of misery could only quicken her interest. He was plainly as good in his way as the old butler — the particular
combination of misfortunes corresponded to the lifelong service. Her interest, none the less, in its turn, could only
quicken her pity, and all her emotions, we have already seen, found prompt enough expression. What could any expression
do indeed now but mark the romantic reality? “Why, you poor thing!”— she came toward him on the weary road. “Now that
you’ve got here I hope at least you’ll stay.” Their intercourse must pitch itself — so far as she was concerned — in
some key that would make up for things. “Do make yourself comfortable. Don’t mind me.”

Yule looked a shade less serious. “That’s exactly what I wanted to say to you!”

She was struck with the way it came in. “Well, if you had been haughty, I shouldn’t have been quite
crushed, should I?”

She turned this over; then with her wonderful living look, “I’m glad to hear it,” she exclaimed, “because, I fear, I
always do! You’ll certainly think,” she added with more gravity, “that I’ve taken a line today!”

“Do you mean that of mistress of the house? Yes — you do seem in possession!”

“You don’t!” she honestly answered; after which, as to attenuate a little the rigour of the charge: “You
don’t comfortably look it, I mean. You don’t look”— she was very serious —“as I want you to.”

It was when she was most serious that she was funniest. “How do you ‘want’ me to look?”

She endeavoured, while he watched her, to make up her mind, but seemed only, after an instant, to recognise a
difficulty. “When you look at me, you’re all right!” she sighed. It was an obstacle to her lesson, and she
cast her eyes about. “Look at that chimneypiece.”

“Well —?” he inquired as his eyes came back from it.

“You mean to say it isn’t lovely?”

He returned to it without passion — gave a vivid sign of mere disability. “I’m sure I don’t know. I don’t mean to
say anything. I’m a rank outsider.”

It had an instant effect on her — she almost pounced upon him. “Then you must let me put you up!”

“Up to what?”

“Up to everything!”— his levity added to her earnestness. “You were smoking when you came in,” she said as she
glanced about. “Where’s your cigarette?”

The young man appreciatively produced another. “I thought perhaps I mightn’t — here.”

“You may everywhere.”

He bent his head to the information. “Everywhere.”

She laughed at his docility, yet could only wish to presume upon it. “It’s a rule of the house!”

He took in the place with greater pleasure. “What delightful rules!”

“How could such a house have any others?”— she was already launched again in her brave relation to it. “I
may go up just once more — mayn’t I— to the long gallery?”

How could he tell? “The long gallery?”

With an added glow she remembered. “I forgot you’ve never seen it. Why, it’s the leading thing about you!” She was
full, on the spot, of the pride of showing it. “Come right up!”

Clement Yule, half seated on a table from which his long left leg nervously swung, only looked at her and smiled and
smoked. “There’s a party up.”

She remembered afresh. “So we must be the party down? Well, you must give me a chance. That long gallery’s
the principal thing I came over for.”

She was strangest of all when she explained. “Where in heaven’s name did you come over from?”

“Missoura Top, where I’m building — just in this style. I came for plans and ideas,” Mrs. Gracedew serenely pursued.
“I felt I must look right at you.”

“But what did you know about us?”

She kept it a moment as if it were too good to give him all at once. “Everything!”

He seemed indeed almost afraid to touch it. “At ‘Missoura Top’?”

“Why not? It’s a growing place — forty thousand the last census.” She hesitated; then as if her warrant should be
slightly more personal: “My husband left it to me.”

The young man presently changed his posture. “You’re a widow?”

Nothing was wanting to the simplicity of her quiet assent. “A very lone woman.” Her face, for a moment, had the
vision of a long distance. “My loneliness is great enough to want something big to hold it — and my taste good enough
to want something beautiful. You see, I had your picture.”

Yule’s innocence made a movement. “Mine?”

Her smile reassured him; she nodded toward the main entrance. “A water colour I chanced on in Boston.”

“In Boston?”

She stared. “Haven’t you heard of Boston either?”

“Yes — but what has Boston heard of me?”

“It wasn’t ‘you,’ unfortunately — it was your divine south front. The drawing struck me so that I got you up — in
the books.”

He appeared, however, rather comically, but half to make it out, or to gather at any rate that there was even more
of it than he feared. “Are we in the books?”

“Did you never discover it?” Before his blankness, the dim apprehension in his fine amused and troubled face of how
much there was of it, her frank, gay concern for him sprang again to the front. “Where in heaven’s name, Captain Yule,
have you come over from?”

He looked at her very kindly, but as if scarce expecting her to follow. “The East End of London.”

She had followed perfectly, he saw the next instant, but she had by no means equally accepted. “What were you doing
there?”

He could only put it, though a little over-consciously, very simply. “Working, you see. When I left the army — it
was much too slow, unless one was personally a whirlwind of war — I began to make out that, for a fighting man —”

“There’s always,” she took him up, “somebody or other to go for?”

He considered her, while he smoked, with more confidence; as if she might after all understand. “The enemy, yes —
everywhere in force. I went for him: misery and ignorance and vice — injustice and privilege and wrong. Such
as you see me —”

“You’re a rabid reformer?”— she understood beautifully. “I wish we had you at Missoura Top!”

He literally, for a moment, in the light of her beauty and familiarity, appeared to measure his possible use there;
then, looking round him again, announced with a sigh that, predicament for predicament, his own would do. “I fear my
work is nearer home. I hope,” he continued, “since you’re so good as to seem to care, to perform a part of that work in
the next House of Commons. My electors have wanted me —”

“Yes, for all this last time. And before that, from my childhood up, there was another reason.” He took a few steps
away and brought it out as rather a shabby one. “A family feud.”

She proved to be quite delighted with it. “Oh, I’m so glad — I hoped I’d strike a ‘feud’! That rounds it
off, and spices it up, and, for the heartbreak with which 1 take leave of you, just neatly completes the fracture!” Her
reference to her going seemed suddenly, on this, to bring her back to a sense of proportion and propriety, and she
glanced about once more for some wrap or reticule. This, in turn, however, was another recall. “Must I really wait — to
go up?”

He had watched her movement, had changed colour, had shifted his place, had tossed away, plainly unwitting, a
cigarette but half smoked; and now he stood in her path to the staircase as if, still unsatisfied, he abruptly sought a
way to turn the tables. “Only till you tell me this: if you absolutely meant, awhile ago, that this old thing is so
precious.”

She met his doubt with amazement and his density with compassion. “Do you literally need I should say it?
Can you stand here and not feel it?” If he had the misfortune of bandaged eyes, she could at least rejoice in her own
vision, which grew intenser with her having to speak for it. She spoke as with a new rush of her impression. “It’s a
place to love —” Yet to say the whole thing was not easy.

“To love —?” he impatiently insisted.

“Well, as you’d love a person!” If that was saying the whole thing, saying the whole thing could only be to go. A
sound from the “party up” came down at that moment, and she took it so clearly as a call that, for a sign of
separation, she passed straight to the stairs. “Good-bye!”

The young man let her reach the foot, but then, though the greatest width of the hall now divided them, spoke,
anxiously and nervously, as if the point she had just made brought them still more together. “I think I ‘feel’ it, you
know; but it’s simply you — your presence, as I may say, and the remarkable way you put it — that make me. I’m afraid
that in your absence —” He struck a match to smoke again.

It gave her time apparently to make out something to pause for. “In my absence?”

He lit his cigarette. “I may come back —”

“Come back?” she took him almost sharply up. “I should like to see you not!”

He smoked a moment. “I mean to my old idea —”

She had quite turned round on him now. “Your old idea —?”

He faced her over the width still between them. “Well — that one could give it up.”

Her stare, at this, fairly filled the space. “Give up Covering? How in the world — or why?”

“Because 1 can’t afford to keep it.”

It brought her straight back, but only half-way: she pulled up short as at a flash. “Can’t you let it?”

Again he smoked before answering. “Let it to you?”

She gave a laugh, and her laugh brought her nearer. “I’d take it in a minute!”

Clement Yule remained grave. “I shouldn’t have the face to charge you a rent that would make it worth one’s while,
and I think even you, dear lady”— his voice just trembled as he risked that address —“wouldn’t have the face to offer
me one.” He paused, but something in his aspect and manner checked in her now any impulse to read his meaning too soon.
“My lovely inheritance is Dead Sea fruit. It’s mortgaged for all it’s worth and I haven’t the means to pay the
interest. If by a miracle I could scrape the money together, it would leave me without a penny to live on.” He puffed
his cigarette profusely. “So if I find the old home at last — I lose it by the same luck!”

Mrs. Gracedew had hung upon his words, and she seemed still to wait, in visible horror, for something that would
improve on them. But when she had to take them for his last, “I never heard of anything so awful!” she broke out. “Do
you mean to say you can’t arrange —?”

“Oh, yes,” he promptly replied, “an arrangement — if that be the name to give it — has been definitely proposed to
me.”

He found the measure difficult to give. “Well — more peculiar than most cases.”

Still she was not satisfied. “More peculiar than mine?”

“Than yours?”— Clement Yule knew nothing about that.

Something, at this, in his tone, his face — it might have been his “British” density — seemed to pull her up. “I
forgot — you don’t know mine. No matter. What is yours?”

He took a few steps in thought. “Well, the fact that I’m asked to change.”

“To change what?”

He wondered how he could put it; then at last, on his own side, simplified. “My attitude.”

“Is that all?”— she was relieved again. “Well, you’re not a statue.”

“No, I’m not a statue; but on the other hand, don’t you see? I’m not a windmill.” There was good-humour, none the
less, in his rigour. “The mortgages I speak of have all found their way, like gregarious silly sheep, into the hands of
one person — a devouring wolf, a very rich, a very sharp man of money. He holds me in this manner at his mercy. He
consents to make things comfortable for me, but he requires that, in return, I shall do something for him that — don’t
you know? — rather sticks in my crop.”

It appeared on this light showing to stick for a moment even in Mrs. Gracedew’s. “Do you mean something wrong?”

He had not a moment’s hesitation. “Exceedingly so!”

She turned it over as if pricing a Greek Aldus. “Anything immoral?”

“Yes — I may literally call it immoral.”

She courted, however, frankly enough, the strict truth. “Too bad to tell?”

He indulged in another pensive fidget, then left her to judge. “He wants me to give up —” Yet again he faltered.

“To give up what?” What could it be, she appeared to ask, that was barely nameable?

He quite blushed to her indeed as he came to the point. “My fundamental views.”

She was disappointed — she had waited for more. “Nothing but them?”

He met her with astonishment. “Surely they’re quite enough, when one has unfortunately”— he rather ruefully smiled
—“so very many!”

She laughed aloud; this was frankly so odd a plea. “Well, I’ve a neat collection too, but I’d ‘swap,’ as
they say in the West, the whole set —!” She looked about the hall for something of equivalent price; after which she
pointed, as it caught her eye, to the great cave of the fireplace. “I’d take that set!”

The young man scarcely followed. “The fire-irons?”

“For the whole fundamental lot!” She gazed with real yearning at the antique group. “They’re three hundred
years old. Do you mean to tell me your wretched ‘views’—?”

“Have anything like that age? No, thank God,” Clement Yule laughed, “my views — wretched as you please! — are quite
in their prime! They’re a hungry little family that has got to be fed. They keep me awake at night.”

“Then you must make up your sleep!” Her impatience grew with her interest. “Listen to me!”

“That would scarce be the way!” he returned. But he added more sincerely: “You must surely see a fellow can’t chuck
his politics.”

“‘Chuck’ them —?”

“Well — sacrifice them.”

“I’d sacrifice mine,” she cried, “for that old fire-back with your arms!” He glanced at the object in question, but
with such a want of intelligence that she visibly resented it. “See how it has stood!”

“See how I’ve stood!” he answered with spirit. “I’ve glowed with a hotter fire than anything in any
chimney, and the warmth and light I diffuse have attracted no little attention. How can I consent to reduce them to the
state of that desolate hearth?”

His companion, freshly struck with the fine details of the desolation, had walked over to the chimney-corner, where,
lost in her deeper impression, she lingered and observed. At last she turned away with her impatience controlled. “It’s
magnificent!”

“The fire-back?”

“Everything — everywhere. I don’t understand your haggling.”

He hesitated. “That’s because you’re ignorant.” Then seeing in the light of her eye that he had applied to her the
word in the language she least liked, he hastened to attenuate. “I mean of what’s behind my reserves.”

She was silent in a way that made their talk more of a discussion than if she had spoken. “What is behind
them?” she presently asked.

“Why, my whole political history. Everything I’ve said, everything I’ve done. My scorching addresses and letters,
reproduced in all the papers. I needn’t go into details, but I’m a pure, passionate, pledged Radical.”

Mrs. Gracedew looked him full in the face. “Well, what if you are?”

He broke into mirth at her tone. “Simply this — that I can’t therefore, from one day to the other, pop up at Gossage
in the purple pomp of the opposite camp. There’s a want of transition. It may be timid of me — it may be abject. But I
can’t.”

If she was not yet prepared to contest she was still less prepared to surrender it, and she confined herself for the
instant to smoothing down with her foot the corner of an old rug. “Have you thought very much about it?”

“You’re the cleverest Tory I’ve ever met!” he laughed. “I didn’t mean to mention my friend’s name, but since
you’ve done so —!” He gave up with a shrug his scruple.

Oh, she had already cleared the ground of it! “It’s he who’s the devouring wolf? It’s he who holds your
mortgages?”

The very lucidity of her interest just checked his assent. “He holds plenty of others, and he treats me very
handsomely.”

She showed of a sudden an inconsequent face. “Do you call that handsome — such a condition?”

He shed surprise. “Why, I thought it was just the condition you could meet.”

She measured her inconsistency, but was not abashed. “We’re not talking of what I can meet.” Yet she found
also a relief in dropping the point. “Why doesn’t he stand himself?”

“Well, like other devouring wolves, he’s not personally adored.”

“Not even,” she asked, “when he offers such liberal terms?”

Clement Yule had to explain. “I dare say he doesn’t offer them to everyone.”

“Only to you?”— at this she quite sprang. “You are personally adored; you will be still more if you stand;
and that, you poor lamb, is why he wants you!”

The young man, obviously pleased to find her after all more at one with him, accepted gracefully enough the burden
her sympathy imposed. “I’m the bearer of my name, I’m the representative of my family; and to my family and my name —
since you’ve led me to it — this countryside has been for generations indulgently attached.”

She listened to him with a sentiment in her face that showed how now, at last, she felt herself deal with the lawful
heir. She seemed to perceive it with a kind of passion. “You do of course what you will with the countryside!”

“Yes”— he went with her —“if we do it as genuine Yules. 1’m obliged of course to grant you that your genuine Yule’s
a Tory of Tories. It’s Mr. Prodmore’s belief that I should carry Gossage in that character, but in that character only.
They won’t look at me in any other.”

It might have taxed a spectator to say in what character Mrs. Gracedew, on this, for a little, considered him.
“Don’t be too sure of people’s not looking at you!”

He blushed again, but he laughed. “We must leave out my personal beauty.”

“We can’t!” she replied with decision. “Don’t we take in Mr. Prodmore’s?”

Captain Yule was not prepared. “You call him beautiful?”

“Hideous.” She settled it; then pursued her investigation. “What’s the extraordinary interest that he attaches
—?”

“To the return of a Tory?” Here the young man was prepared. “Oh, his desire is born of his fear — his
terror on behalf of Property, which he sees, somehow, with an intensely Personal, with a quite colossal ‘P.’ He has a
great deal of that article, and very little of anything else.”

Mrs. Gracedew, accepting provisionally his demonstration, had one of her friendly recalls. “Do you call that nice
daughter ‘very little’?”

The young man looked quite at a loss. “Is she very big? I really didn’t notice her — and moreover she’s just a part
of the Property. He thinks things are going too far.”

She sat straight down on a stiff chair; on which, with high distinctness: “Well, they are!”

He stood before her in the discomposure of her again thus appearing to fail him. “Aren’t you then a lover of
justice?”

“A passionate one!” She sat there as upright as if she held the scales. “Where’s the justice of your losing this
house?” Generous as well as strenuous, all her fairness thrown out by her dark old high-backed seat, she put it to him
as from the judicial bench. “To keep Covering, you must carry Gossage!”

The odd face he made at it might have betrayed a man dazzled. “As a renegade?”

“As a genuine Yule. What business have you to be anything else?” She had already arranged it all. “You must close
with Mr. Prodmore — you must stand in the Tory interest.” She hung fire a moment; then as she got up: “If you will,
I’ll conduct your canvass!”

He stared at the distracting picture. “That puts the temptation high!”

But she brushed the mere picture away. “Ah, don’t look at me as if I were the temptation! Look at this
sweet old human home, and feel all its gathered memories. Do you want to know what they do to me?” She took the survey
herself again, as if to be really sure. “They speak to me for Mr. Prodmore.”

He followed with a systematic docility the direction of her eyes, but as if with the result only of its again coming
home to him that there was no accounting for what things might do. “Well, there are others than these, you know,” he
good-naturedly pleaded —“things for which I’ve spoken, repeatedly and loudly, to others than you.” The very manner of
his speaking on such occasions appeared, for that matter, now to come back to him. “One’s ‘human home’ is all very
well, but the rest of one’s humanity is better!” She gave, at this, a droll soft wail; she turned impatiently away. “I
see you’re disgusted with me, and I’m sorry; but one must take one’s self as circumstances and experience have made
one, and it’s not my fault, don’t you know? if they’ve made me a very modern man. I see
something else in the world than the beauty of old show-houses and the glory of old show-families. There are thousands
of people in England who can show no houses at all, and I don’t feel it utterly shameful to share their poor fate!”

She had moved away with impatience, and it was the advantage of this for her that the back she turned prevented him
from seeing how intently she listened. She seemed to continue to listen even after he had stopped; but if that gave him
a sense of success, he might have been checked by the way she at last turned round with a sad and beautiful headshake.
“We share the poor fate of humanity whatever we do, and we do something to help and console when we’ve something
precious to show. What on earth is more precious than what the ages have slowly wrought? They’ve trusted us, in such a
case, to keep it — to do something, in our turn, for them.” She shone out at him as if her contention had the
evidence of the noonday sun, and yet in her generosity she superabounded and explained. “It’s such a virtue, in
anything, to have lasted; it’s such an honour, for anything, to have been spared. To all strugglers from the wreck of
time hold out a pitying hand!”

Yule, on this argument — of a strain which even a good experience of debate could scarce have prepared him to meet —
had not a congruous rejoinder absolutely pat, and his hesitation unfortunately gave him time to see how soon his
companion made out that what had touched him most in it was her particular air in presenting it. She would manifestly
have preferred he should have been floored by her mere moral reach; yet he was aware that his own made no great show as
he took refuge in general pleasantry. “What a plea for looking backward, dear lady, to come from Missoura Top!”

“We’re making a Past at Missoura Top as fast as ever we can, and I should like to see you lay your hand on an hour
of the one we’ve made! It’s a tight fit, as yet, I grant,” she said, “and that’s just why I like, in yours, to find
room, don’t you see? to turn round. You’re in it, over here, and you can’t get out; so just make the best of
that and treat the thing as part of the fun!”

“The whole of the fun, to me,” the young man replied, “is in hearing you defend it! It’s like your defending
hereditary gout or chronic rheumatism and sore throat — the things I feel aching in every old bone of these walls and
groaning in every old draught that, I’m sure, has for centuries blown through them.”

Mrs. Gracedew looked as if no woman could be shaken who was so prepared to be just all round. “If there be aches —
there may be — you’re here to soothe them, and if there be draughts — there must be! — you’re here to stop
them up. And do you know what 1’m here for? If I’ve come so far and so straight, I’ve almost wondered myself.
I’ve felt with a kind of passion — but now I see why I’ve felt.” She moved about the hall with the excitement
of this perception, and, separated from him at last by a distance across which he followed her discovery with a visible
suspense, she brought out the news. “I’m here for an act of salvation — I’m here to avert a sacrifice!”

So they stood a little, with more, for the minute, passing between them than either really could say. She might have
flung down a glove that he decided on the whole, passing his hand over his head as the seat of some confusion, not to
pick up. Again, but flushed as well as smiling, he sought the easiest cover. “You’re here, I think, madam, to be a
memory for all my future!”

Well, she was willing, she showed as she came nearer, to take it, at the worst, for that. “You’ll be one for mine,
if I can see you by that hearth. Why do you make such a fuss about changing your politics? If you’d come to Missoura
Top, you’d change them quick enough!” Then, as she saw further and struck harder, her eyes grew deep, her face even
seemed to pale, and she paused, splendid and serious, with the force of her plea. “What do politics amount to, compared
with religions? Parties and programmes come and go, but a duty like this abides. There’s nothing you can break with”—
she pressed him closer, ringing out —“that would be like breaking here. The very words are violent and ugly —
as much a sacrilege as if you had been trusted with the key of the temple. This is the temple — don’t profane
it! Keep up the old altar kindly — you can’t set up a new one as good. You must have beauty in your life,
don’t you see? — that’s the only way to make sure of it for the lives of others. Keep leaving it to them, to
all the poor others,” she went on with her bright irony, “and heaven only knows what will become of it! Does it take
one of us to feel that? — to preach you the truth? Then it’s good, Captain Yule, we come right over — just to
see, you know, what you may happen to be about. We know,” she went on while her sense of proportion seemed to play into
her sense of humour, “what we haven’t got, worse luck; so that if you’ve happily got it you’ve got it also for
us. You’ve got it in trust, you see, and oh! we have an eye on you. You’ve had it so for me, all these dear
days that I’ve been drinking it in, that, to be grateful, I’ve wanted regularly to do something.” With which,
as if in the rich confidence of having convinced him, she came so near as almost to touch him. “Tell me now I shall
have done it — I shall have kept you at your post!”

If he moved, on this, immediately further, it was with the oddest air of seeking rather to study her remarks at his
ease than to express an independence of them. He kept, to this end, his face averted — he was so completely now in
intelligent possession of her own. The sacrifice in question carried him even to the door of the court, where he once
more stood so long engaged that the persistent presentation of his back might at last have suggested either a
confession or a request.

Mrs. Gracedew, meanwhile, a little spent with her sincerity, seated herself again in the great chair, and if she
sought, visibly enough, to read a meaning into his movement, she had as little triumph for one possible view of it as
she had resentment for the other. The possibility that he yielded left her after all as vague in respect to a next step
as the possibility that he merely wished to get rid of her. The moments elapsed without her abdicating; and indeed when
he finally turned round his expression was an equal check to any power to feel she might have won. “You have,” he
queerly smiled at her, “a standpoint quite your own and a style of eloquence that the few scraps of parliamentary
training I’ve picked up don’t seem at all to fit me to deal with. Of course I don’t pretend, you know, that I don’t
care for Covering.”

That, at all events, she could be glad to hear, if only perhaps for the tone in it that was so almost comically
ingenuous. But her relief was reasonable and her exultation temperate. “You haven’t even seen it yet.” She risked,
however, a laugh. “Aren’t you a bit afraid?”

He took a minute to reply, then replied — as if to make it up — with a grand collapse. “Yes; awfully. But if I am,”
he hastened in decency to add, “it isn’t only Covering that makes me.”

This left his friend apparently at a loss. “What else is it?”

“Everything. But it doesn’t in the least matter,” he loosely pursued. “You may be quite correct. When we talk of the
house your voice comes to me somehow as the wind in its old chimneys.”

Her amusement distinctly revived. “I hope you don’t mean I roar!”

He blushed again; there was no doubt he was confused. “No — nor yet perhaps that you whistle! I don’t believe the
wind does either, here. It only whispers,” he sought gracefully to explain; “and it sighs —”

“And I hope,” she broke in, “that it sometimes laughs!”

The sound she gave only made him, as he looked at her, more serious. “Whatever it does, it’s all right.”

“All right?”— they were sufficiently together again for her to lay her hand straight on his arm. “Then you
promise?”

“Promise what?”

He had turned as pale as if she hurt him, and she took her hand away. “To meet Mr. Prodmore.”

“Oh, dear, no; not yet!”— he quite recovered himself. “I must wait — I must think.”

She looked disappointed, and there was a momentary silence. “When have you to answer him?”

“Oh, he gives me time!” Clement Yule spoke very much as he might have said, “Oh, in two minutes!”

“I wouldn’t give you time,” Mrs. Gracedew cried with force —“I’d give you a shaking! For God’s sake, at any
rate”— and she really tried to push him off —“go upstairs!”

“And literally find the dreadful man?” This was so little his personal idea that, distinctly dodging her
pressure, he had already reached the safe quarter.

But it befell that at the same moment she saw Cora reappear on the upper landing — a circumstance that promised her
a still better conclusion. “He’s coming down!”

Cora, in spite of this announcement, came down boldly enough without him and made directly for Mrs. Gracedew, to
whom her eyes had attached themselves with an undeviating glare. Her plain purpose of treating this lady as an isolated
presence allowed their companion perfect freedom to consider her arrival with sharp alarm. His disconcerted stare
seemed for a moment to balance; it wandered, gave a wild glance at the open door, then searched the ascent of the
staircase, in which, apparently, it now found a coercion. “I’ll go up!” he gasped; and he took three steps at a
time.

5

The girl threw herself, in her flushed eagerness, straight upon the wonderful lady. “I’ve come back
to you — I want to speak to you!” The need had been a rapid growth, but it was clearly immense. “May I confide in
you?”

Her instant overflow left Mrs. Gracedew both astonished and amused. “You too?” she laughed. “Why it is good
we come over!”

“It is, indeed!” Cora gratefully echoed. “You were so very kind to me and seemed to think me so curious.”

The mirth of her friend redoubled. “Well, I loved you for it, and it was nothing moreover to what you thought
me!”

Miss Prodmore found, for this, no denial — she only presented her frank high colour. “I loved you. But I’m
the worst!” she generously added. “And I’m solitary.”

“Ah, so am I!” Mrs. Gracedew declared with gaiety, but with emphasis. “A very queer thing always
is solitary! But, since we have that link, by all means confide.”

“Well, I was met here by tremendous news.” Cora produced it with a purple glow. “He wants me to marry him!”

Mrs. Gracedew looked amiably receptive, but as if she failed as yet to follow. “‘He’ wants you?”

“Papa, of course. He has settled it!”

Mrs. Gracedew was still vague. “Settled what?”

“Why, the whole question. That I must take him.”

Mrs. Gracedew seemed to frown at her own scattered wits. “But, my dear, take whom?”

The girl looked surprised at this lapse of her powers. “Why, Captain Yule, who just went up.”

“Oh!” said Mrs. Gracedew with a full stare. “Oh!” she repeated, looking straight away.

“I thought you would know,” Cora gently explained.

Her friend’s eyes, with a kinder light now, came back to her. “I didn’t know.” Mrs. Gracedew looked, in truth, as if
that had been sufficiently odd, and seemed also to wonder at two or three things more. It all, however, broke quickly
into a question. “Has Captain Yule asked you?”

“No, but he will”— Cora was clear as a bell. “He’50 do it to keep the house. It’s mortgaged to papa, and
Captain Yule buys it back.”

Her friend had an illumination that was rapid for the way it spread. “By marrying you?” she quavered.

Cora, under further parental instruction, had plainly mastered the subject. “By giving me his name and his position.
They’re awfully great, and they’re the price, don’t you see?” she modestly mentioned. “My price. Papa’s price.
Papa wants them.”

Mrs. Gracedew had caught hold; yet there were places where her grasp was weak, and she had, strikingly, begun again
to reflect. “But his name and his position, great as they may be, are his dreadful politics!”

Cora threw herself with energy into this advance. “You know about his dreadful politics? He’s to change
them,” she recited, “to get me. And if he gets me —”

“He keeps the house?”— Mrs. Gracedew snatched it up.

Cora continued to show her schooling. “I go with it — he’s to have us both. But only,” she admonishingly
added, “if he changes. The question is —will he change?”

Mrs. Gracedew appeared profoundly to entertain it. “1 see. Will he change?”

Cora’s consideration of it went even further. “Has he changed?”

It went — and the effect was odd — a little too far for her companion, in whom, just discernibly, it had touched the
spring of impatience. “My dear child, how in the world should I know?”

But Cora knew exactly how anyone would know. “He hasn’t seemed to care enough for the house. Does he
care?”

Mrs. Gracedew moved away, passed over to the fireplace, and stood a moment looking at the old armorial fire-back she
had praised to its master — yet not, it must be added, as if she particularly saw it. Then as she faced about: “You had
better ask him!”

They stood thus confronted, with the fine old interval between them, and the girl’s air was for a moment that of
considering such a course. “If he does care,” she said at last, “he’ll propose.”

Mrs. Gracedew, from where she stood in relation to the stairs, saw at this point the subject of their colloquy
restored to view: Captain Yule was just upon them — he had turned the upper landing. The sight of him forced from her
in a flash an ejaculation that she tried, however, to keep private —“He does care!” She passed swiftly, before he
reached them, back to the girl and, in a quick whisper, but with full conviction, let her have it: “He’ll propose!”

Her movement had made her friend aware, and the young man, hurrying down, was now in the hall. Cora, at his hurry,
looked dismay —“Then I fly!” With which, casting about for a direction, she reached the door to the court.

Captain Yule, however, at this result of his return, expressed instant regret. “I drive Miss Prodmore away!”

Mrs. Gracedew, more quickly still, eased off the situation. “It’s all right!” She had embraced both parties with a
smile, but it was most liberal now for Cora. “Do you mind, one moment?”— it conveyed, unmistakeably, a full
intelligence and a fine explanation. “I’ve something to say to Captain Yule.”

Cora stood in the doorway, robust against the garden-light, and looking from one to the other. “Yes — but I’ve also
something more to say to you.”

“Do you mean now?” the young man asked.

It was the first time he had spoken to her, and her hesitation might have signified a maidenly flutter. “No — but
before she goes.”

Mrs. Gracedew took it amiably up. “Come back, then; I’m not going.” And there was both dismissal and encouragement
in the way that, as on the occasion of the girl’s former retreat, she blew her a familiar kiss. Cora, still with her
face to them, waited just enough to show that she took it without a response; then, with a quick turn, dashed out,
while Mrs. Gracedew looked at their visitor in vague surprise. “What’s the matter with her?”

She had turned away as soon as she spoke, moving as far from him as she had moved a few moments before from Cora.
The silence that, as he watched her, followed her question would have been seen by a spectator to be a hard one for
either to break. “I don’t know what’s the matter with her,” he said at last; “I’m afraid I only know what’s the matter
with me. It will doubtless give you pleasure to learn,” he added, “that I’ve closed with Mr. Prodmore.”

It was a speech that, strangely enough, seemed but half to dissipate the hush. Mrs. Gracedew reached the great
chimney again; again she stood there with her face averted; and when she finally replied it was in other words than he
might have supposed himself naturally to inspire. “I thought you said he gave you time.”

“Yes; but you produced just now so deep an effect on me that I thought best not to take any.” He appeared to listen
to a sound from above, and, for a moment, under this impulse, his eyes travelled about almost as if he were alone. Then
he completed, with deliberation, his statement. “I came upon him right there, and I burnt my ships.”

Mrs. Gracedew continued not to meet his face. “You do what he requires?”

The young man was markedly, consciously caught. “I do what he requires. I felt the tremendous force of all you said
to me.”

She turned round on him now, as if perhaps with a slight sharpness, the face of responsibility — even, it might be,
of reproach. “So did I— or I shouldn’t have said it!”

It was doubtless this element of justification in her tone that drew from him a laugh a tiny trifle dry. “You’re
perhaps not aware that you wield an influence of which it’s not too much to say —”

But he paused at the important point so long that she took him up. “To say what?”

“Well, that it’s practically irresistible!”

It sounded a little as if it had not been what he first meant; but it made her, none the less, still graver and just
faintly ironical. “You’ve given me the most flattering proof of my influence that I’ve ever enjoyed in my life!”

He fixed her very hard, now distinctly so mystified that he could only wonder what different recall of her previous
attitude she would have looked for. “This was inevitable, dear madam, from the moment you had converted me — and in
about three minutes too! — into the absolute echo of your raptures.”

Nothing was, indeed, more extraordinary than her air of having suddenly forgotten them. “My ‘raptures’?”

He was amazed. “Why, about my home.”

He might look her through and through, but she had no eyes for himself, though she had now quitted the fireplace and
finally recognised this allusion. “Oh, yes — your home!” From where had she come back to it? “It’s a nice tattered,
battered old thing.” This account of it was the more shrunken that her observation, even as she spoke, freshly went the
rounds. “It has defects of course”— with this renewed attention they appeared suddenly to strike her. They had popped
out, conspicuous, and for a little it might have been a matter of conscience. However, her conscience dropped. “But
it’s no use mentioning them now!”

They had half an hour earlier been vividly present to himself, but to see her thus oddly pulled up by them was to
forget on the spot the ground he had taken. “I’m particularly sorry,” he returned with some spirit, “that you didn’t
mention them before!”

At this imputation of inconsequence, of a levity not, after all, without its excuse, Mrs. Gracedew was reduced, in
keeping her resentment down, to an effort not quite successfully disguised. It was in a tone, nevertheless, all the
more mild in intention that she reminded him of where he had equally failed. “If you had really gone over the house, as
I almost went on my knees to you to do, you might have discovered some of them yourself!”

“How can you say that,” the young man asked with heat, “when I was precisely in the very act of it? It was just
because I was that the first person I met above was Mr. Prodmore; on which, feeling that I must come to it
sooner or later, I simply gave in to him on the spot — yielded him, to have it well over, the whole of his point.”

She listened to this account of the matter as she might have gazed, from afar, at some queer object that was scarce
distinguishable. It left her a moment in the deepest thought, but she presently recovered her tone. “Let me then
congratulate you on at last knowing what you want!”

But there were, after all, he instantly showed, no such great reasons for that. “I only know it so far as
you know it! I struck while the iron was hot — or at any rate while the hammer was.”

“Of course I recognise”— she adopted his image with her restored gaiety —“that it can rarely have been exposed to
such a fire. I blazed up, and I know that when I burn —”

She had pulled up with the foolish sense of this. “When you burn?”

“Well, I do it as Chicago does.”

He also could laugh out now. “Isn’t that usually down to the ground?”

Meeting his laugh, she threw up her light arms. “As high as the sky!” Then she came back, as with a scruple, to the
real question. “I suppose you’ve still formalities to go through.”

“With Mr. Prodmore?” Well, he would suppose it too if she liked. “Oh, endless, tiresome ones, no doubt!”

This sketch of them made her wonder. “You mean they’ll take so very, very long?”

He seemed after all to know perfectly what he meant. “Every hour, every month, that I can possibly make them
last!”

She was with him here, however, but to a certain point. “You mustn’t drag them out too much — must you?
Won’t he think in that case you may want to retract?”

Yule apparently tried to focus Mr. Prodmore under this delusion, and with a success that had a quick, odd result. “I
shouldn’t be so terribly upset by his mistake, you know, even if he did!”

His manner, with its slight bravado, left her proportionately shocked. “Oh, it would never do to give him any colour
whatever for supposing you to have any doubt that, as one may say, you’ve pledged your honour.”

He devoted to this proposition more thought than its simplicity would have seemed to demand; but after a minute, at
all events, his intelligence triumphed. “Of course not — not when I haven’t any doubt!”

Though his intelligence had triumphed, she still wished to show she was there to support it. “How can you
possibly have any — any more than you can possibly have that one’s honour is everything in life?” And her
charming eyes expressed to him her need to feel that he was quite at one with her on that point.

He could give her every assurance. “Oh, yes — everything in life!”

It did her much good, brought back the rest of her brightness. “Wasn’t it just of the question of the honour of
things that we talked awhile ago — and of the difficulty of sometimes keeping our sense of it clear? There’s no more to
be said therefore,” she went on with the faintest soft sigh about it, “except that I leave you to your ancient glory as
I leave you to your strict duty.” She had these things there before her; they might have been a well-spread board from
which she turned away fasting. “I hope you’ll do justice to dear old Covering in spite of its weak points, and I hope
above all you’ll not be incommoded —”

As she hesitated here he was too intent. “Incommoded —?”

She saw it better than she could express it. “Well, by such a rage —!”

He challenged this description with a strange gleam. “You suppose it will be a rage?”

She laughed out at his look. “Are you afraid of the love that kills?”

He grew singularly grave. “Will it kill —?”

“Great passions have!”— she was highly amused.

But he could only stare. “Is it a great passion?”

“Surely — when so many feel it!”

He was fairly bewildered. “But how many —?”

She reckoned them up. “Let’s see. If you count them all —”

“‘All’?” Clement Yule gasped.

She looked at him, in turn, slightly mystified. “I see. You knock off some. About half?”

It was too obscure — he broke down. “Whom on earth are you talking about?”

“Why, the electors —”

“Of Gossage?”— he leaped at it. “Oh!”

“I got the whole thing up — there are six thousand. It’s such a fine figure!” said Mrs. Gracedew.

He had sharply passed from her, to cover his mistake, and it carried him half round the hall. Then, as if aware that
this pause itself compromised him, he came back confusedly and with her last words in his ear. “Has she a fine
figure?”

But her own thoughts were off. “‘She’?”

He blushed and recovered himself. “Aren’t we talking —”

“Of Gossage? Oh, yes — she has every charm! Good-bye,” said Mrs. Gracedew.

He pulled, at this, the longest face, but was kept dumb a moment by the very decision with which she again began to
gather herself. It held him helpless, and there was finally real despair in his retarded protest. “You don’t mean to
say you’re going?”

“You don’t mean to say you’re surprised at it? Haven’t I done,” she luminously asked, “what I told you I had been so
mystically moved to come for?” She recalled to him by her renewed supreme survey the limited character of this errand,
which she then in a brisk familiar word expressed to the house itself. “You dear old thing — you’re saved!”

Clement Yule might on the other hand, by his simultaneous action, have given himself out for lost. “For God’s sake,”
he cried as he circled earnestly round her, “don’t go till I can come back to thank you!” He pulled out his watch. “I
promised to return immediately to Prodmore.”

This completely settled his visitor. “Then don’t let me, for a moment more, keep you away from him. You must have
such lots”— it went almost without saying —“to talk comfortably over.”

The young man’s embrace of that was, in his restless movement, to roam to the end of the hall furthest from the
stairs. But here his assent was entire. “I certainly feel, you know, that I must see him again.” He rambled even to the
open door and looked with incoherence into the court. “Yes, decidedly, I must!”

“Is he out there?” Mrs. Gracedew lightly asked.

He turned short round. “No — I left him in the long gallery.”

“You saw that, then?”— she flashed back into eagerness. “Isn’t it lovely?”

Clement Yule rather wondered. “I didn’t notice it. How could I?”

His face was so woeful that she broke into a laugh. “How couldn’t you? Notice it now, then. Go up to
him!”

He crossed at last to the staircase, but at the foot he stopped again. “Will you wait for me?”

He had such an air of proposing a bargain, of making the wait a condition, that she had to look it well in the face.
The result of her doing so, however, was apparently a strong sense that she could give him no pledge. Her silence,
after a moment, expressed that; but, for a further emphasis, moving away, she sank suddenly into the chair she had
already occupied and in which, serious again and very upright, she continued to withhold her promise. “Go up to him!”
she simply repeated. He obeyed, with an abrupt turn, mounting briskly enough several steps, but pausing midway and
looking back at her as if he were after all irresolute. He was in fact so much so that, at the sight of her still in
her chair and alone by his cold hearth, he descended a few steps again and seemed, with too much decidedly on his mind,
on the point of breaking out. She had sat a minute in such thought, figuring him clearly as gone, that at the sound of
his return she sprang up with a protest. This checked him afresh, and he remained where he had paused, still on the
ascent and exchanging with her a look to which neither party was inspired, oddly enough, to contribute a word. It
struck him, without words, at all events, as enough, and he now took his upward course at such a pace that he presently
disappeared. She listened awhile to his retreating tread; then her own, on the old flags of the hall, became rapid,
though, it may perhaps be added, directed to no visible end. It conveyed her, in the great space, from point to point,
but she now for the first time moved there without attention and without joy, her course determined by a series of such
inward throbs as might have been the suppressed beats of a speech. A real observer, had such a monster been present,
would have followed this tacit evolution from sign to sign and from shade to shade. “Why didn’t he tell me
all? — But it was none of my business! — What does he mean to do? — What should he do but what he has
done? — And what can he do, when he’s so deeply committed, when he’s practically engaged, when he’s just the
same as married — and buried? — The thing for me to ‘do’ is just to pull up short and bundle out: to remove
from the scene they encumber the numerous fragments — well, of what?”

Her thought was plainly arrested by the sight of Cora Prodmore, who, returning from the garden, reappeared first in
the court and then in the open doorway. Mrs. Gracedew’s was a thought, however, that, even when desperate, was never
quite vanquished, and it found a presentable public solution in the pieces of the vase smashed by Chivers and just
then, on the table where he had laid them, catching her eye. “Of my old Chelsea pot!” Her gay, sad headshake as she
took one of them up pronounced for Cora’s benefit its funeral oration. She laid the morsel thoughtfully down, while her
visitor seemed with simple dismay to read the story.

6

“Has he been breaking—?” the girl asked in horror.

Mrs. Gracedew laughingly tapped her heart. “Yes, we’ve had a scene! He went up again to your father.”

Cora was disconcerted. “Papa’s not there. He just came down to me by the other way.”

“Then he can join you here,” said Mrs. Gracedew with instant resignation. “I’m going.”

“Just when I’ve come back to you — at the risk,” Cora made bold to throw off, “of again interrupting, though I
really hoped he had gone, your conversation with Captain Yule?”

Cora picked it up for another toss. “You had a good deal to say a few minutes ago!”

“Well, I’ve said it, and it’s over. I’ve nothing more to say at all,” Mrs. Gracedew insisted. But her announcement
of departure left her on this occasion, as each of its predecessors had done, with a last, with indeed a fresh,
solicitude. “What has become of my delightful ‘party’?”

“They’ve been dismissed, through the grounds, by the other door. But they mentioned,” the girl pursued, “the
probable arrival of a fresh lot.”

Mrs. Gracedew showed on this such a revival of interest as fairly amounted to yearning. “Why, what times you have!
You,” she nevertheless promptly decreed, “must take the fresh lot — since the house is now practically
yours!”

Poor Cora looked blank. “Mine?”

Her companion matched her stare. “Why, if you’re going to marry Captain Yule.”

Cora coloured, in a flash, to the eyes. “I’m not going to marry Captain Yule!”

Her friend as quickly paled again. “Why on earth then did you tell me only ten minutes ago that you were?”

Cora could only look bewildered at the charge. “I told you nothing of the sort. I only told you”— she was almost
indignantly positive —“that he had been ordered me!”

It sent Mrs. Gracedew off; she moved away to indulge an emotion that presently put on the form of extravagant mirth.
“Like a dose of medicine or a course of baths?”

The girl’s gravity and lucidity sustained themselves. “As a remedy for the single life.” Oh, she had mastered the
matter now! “But I won’t take him!”

“Ah, then, why didn’t you let me know?” Mrs. Gracedew panted.

“I was on the very point of it when he came in and interrupted us.” Cora clearly felt she might be wicked, but was
at least not stupid. “It’s just to let you know that I’m here now.”

Ah, the difference it made! This difference, for Mrs. Gracedew, suddenly shimmered in all the place, and her
companion’s fixed eyes caught in her face the reflection of it. “Excuse me — I misunderstood. I somehow took for
granted —!” She stopped, a trifle awkwardly — suddenly tender, for Cora, as to the way she had inevitably seen it.

“You took for granted I’d jump at him? Well, you can take it for granted I won’t!”

Her light, indeed, for her friend, was at first almost blinding; it took Mrs. Gracedew a moment to distinguish —
which she then did, however, with immense eagerness. “You prefer someone else?” Cora’s promptitude dropped at this,
and, starting to hear it, as you might well have seen, for the first time publicly phrased, she abruptly moved away. A
minute’s sense of her scruple was enough for Mrs. Gracedew: this was proved by the tone of soft remonstrance and high
benevolence with which that lady went on. She had looked very hard, first, at one of the old warriors hung on the old
wall, and almost spoke as if he represented their host. “He seems remarkably clever.”

Cora, at something in the sound, quite jumped about. “Then why don’t you marry him yourself?”

Mrs. Gracedew gave a sort of happy sigh. “Well, I’ve got fifty reasons! I rather think one of them must be that he
hasn’t happened to ask me.”

It was a speech, however, that her visitor could easily better. “I haven’t got fifty reasons, but I have
got one.”

Mrs. Gracedew smiled as if it were indeed a stroke of wit. “You mean your case is one of those in which safety is
not in numbers?” And then on Cora’s visibly not understanding: “It is when reasons are bad that one
needs so many!”

The proposition was too general for the girl to embrace, but the simplicity of her answer was far from spoiling it.
“My reason is awfully good.”

Mrs. Gracedew did it complete justice. “I see. An older friend.”

Cora listened as at a warning sound; yet she had by this time practically let herself go, and it took but Mrs.
Gracedew’s extended encouraging hand, which she quickly seized, to bring the whole thing out. “I’ve been trying this
hour, in my terrible need of advice, to tell you about him!” It came in a small clear torrent, a soft tumble-out of
sincerity. “After we parted — you and I— at the station, he suddenly turned up there, and I took a little quiet walk
with him which gave you time to get here before me and of which my father is in a state of ignorance that I don’t know
whether to regard as desirable or dreadful.”

Mrs. Gracedew, attentive and wise, might have been, for her face, the old family solicitor. “You want me then to
inform your father?” It was a wonderful intonation.

Poor Cora, for that matter too, might suddenly have become under this touch the prodigal with a list of debts. She
seemed an instant to look out of a blurred office window-pane at a grey London sky; then she broke away. “I really
don’t know what I want. I think,” she honestly admitted, “I just want kindness.”

Mrs. Gracedew’s expression might have hinted — but not for too long — that Bedford Row was an odd place to apply for
it; she appeared for an instant to make the revolving office-chair creak. “What do you mean by kindness?”

Cora was a model client — she perfectly knew. “I mean help.”

Mrs. Gracedew closed an inkstand with a clap and locked a couple of drawers. “What do you mean by help?”

The client’s inevitable answer seemed to perch on the girl’s lips: “A thousand pounds.” But it came out in another,
in a much more charming form. “I mean that I love him.”

The family solicitor got up: it was a high figure. “And does he love you?”

Cora hesitated. “Ask him.”

Mrs. Gracedew weighed the necessity. “Where is he?”

“Waiting.” And the girl’s glance, removed from her companion and wandering aloft and through space, gave the scale
of his patience.

Her adviser, however, required the detail. “But where?”

Cora briefly demurred again. “In that funny old grotto.”

Mrs. Gracedew thought. “Funny?”

“Half-way from the park gate. It’s very nice!” Cora more eagerly added.

Mrs. Gracedew continued to reflect. “Oh, I know it!” She spoke as if she had known it most of her life.

Her tone encouraged her client. “Then will you see him?”

“No.” This time it was almost dry.

“No?”

“No. If you want help —” Mrs. Gracedew, still musing, explained.

“Yes?”

“Well — you want a great deal.”

“Oh, so much!”— Cora but too woefully took it in. “I want,” she quavered, “all there is!”

“Well — you shall have it.”

“All there is?”— she convulsively held her to it.

Mrs. Gracedew had finally mastered it. “I’ll see your father.”

“You dear, delicious lady!” Her young friend had again encompassed her; but, passive and preoccupied, she showed
some of the chill of apprehension. It was indeed as if to meet this that Cora went earnestly on: “He’s intensely
sympathetic!”

“Your father?” Mrs. Gracedew had her reserves.

“Oh, no — the other person. I so believe in him!” Cora cried.

Mrs. Gracedew looked at her a moment. “Then so do I— and I like him for believing in you.”

“Oh, he does that,” the girl hurried on, “far more than Captain Yule — I could see just with one glance that
he doesn’t at all. Papa has of course seen the young man I mean, but we’ve been so sure papa would hate it
that we’ve had to be awfully careful. He’s the son of the richest man at Bellborough, he’s Granny’s godson, and he’ll
inherit his father’s business, which is simply immense. Oh, from the point of view of the things he’s in”— and
Cora found herself sharp on this —“he’s quite as good as papa himself. He has been away for three days, and if he met
me at the station, where, on his way back, he has to change, it was by the merest chance in the world. I wouldn’t love
him,” she brilliantly wound up, “if he wasn’t nice.”

“A man’s always nice if you will love him!” Mrs. Gracedew laughed.

Her young friend more than met it. “He’s nicer still if he ‘will’ love you!”

But Mrs. Gracedew kept her head. “Nicer of course than if he won’t! But are you sure this gentleman does
love you?”

“As sure as that the other one doesn’t.”

“Ah, but the other one doesn’t know you.”

“Yes, thank goodness — and never shall!”

Mrs. Gracedew watched her a little, but on the girl’s meeting her eyes turned away with a quick laugh. “You mean of
course till it’s too late.”

“Altogether!” Cora spoke as with quite the measure of the time.

Mrs. Gracedew, revolving a moment in silence, appeared to accept her showing. “Then what’s the matter?” she
impatiently asked.

“The matter?”

“Your father’s objection to the gentleman in the grotto.”

Cora now for the first time faltered. “His name.”

This for a moment pulled up her friend, in whom, however, relief seemed to contend with alarm. “Only his name?”

“Hall Pegg?” Mrs. Gracedew had winced, but she quickly recovered herself, and, for a further articulation, appeared,
from delicacy, to form the sound only with her mind. The sound she formed with her lips was, after an instant, simply
“Oh!”

It was to the combination of the spoken and the unspoken that Cora desperately replied. “It sounds like a
hat-rack!”

“‘Hall Pegg’? ‘Hall Pegg’?” Mrs. Gracedew now made it, like a questionable coin, ring upon the counter. But it lay
there as lead and without, for a moment, her taking it up again. “How many has your father?” she inquired instead.

“How many names?” Miss Prodmore seemed dimly to see that there was no hope in that. “He somehow makes out five.”

Mrs. Gracedew visibly considered, then for a moment dropped Mr. Pegg. “And what are they!”

“Oh, all sorts. ‘Marmaduke Clement —’” Cora tried to recall.

Mrs. Gracedew, however, had already checked her. “I see —‘Marmaduke Clement’ will do.” She appeared for a minute
intent, but, as with an energetic stoop, she picked up Mr. Pegg. “But so will yours,” she said, with decision.

“Mine? — you mean his!”

“The same thing — what you’ll be.”

“Mrs. Hall Pegg!”— Cora tried it, with resolution, loudly.

It fell a little flat in the noble space, but Mrs. Gracedew’s manner quickly covered it. “It won’t make you a bit
less charming.”

Cora wondered — she hoped. “Only for papa.”

And what was he? Mrs. Gracedew by this time seemed assentingly to ask. “Never for me!” she
soothingly declared.

Cora took this in with deep thanks that gripped and patted her companion’s hand. “You accept it more than
gracefully. But if you could only make him—!”

Mrs. Gracedew was all concentration. “‘Him’? Mr. Pegg?”

“No — he naturally has to accept it. But papa.”

She looked harder still at this greater feat, then seemed to see light. “Well, it will be difficult — but I
will.”

Doubt paled before it. “Oh, you heavenly thing!”

Mrs. Gracedew after an instant, sustained by this appreciation, went a step further. “And I’ll make him say
he does!”

Cora closed her eyes with the dream of it. “Oh, if I could only hear him!”

Her benefactress had at last run it to earth. “It will be enough if I do.”

Cora quickly considered; then, with prompt accommodation, gave the comfortable measure of her faith. “Yes — I think
it will.” She was quite ready to retire. “I’ll give you time.”

This pulled the girl up a little, as if in parting with her secret she had parted with her all. “Something
better?”

“If I help you, you know,” Mrs. Gracedew explained, “you must help me.”

“But how?”

“By a clear assurance.” The charming woman’s fine face now gave the real example of clearness. “That if Captain Yule
should propose to you, you would unconditionally refuse him.”

Cora flushed with the surprise of its being only that. “With my dying breath!”

Mrs. Gracedew scanned her robust vitality. “Will you make it even a promise?”

The girl looked about her in solid certainty. “Do you want me to sign —?”

Mrs. Gracedew was quick. “No, don’t sign!”

Yet Cora was so ready to oblige. “Then what shall I do?”

Mrs. Gracedew turned away, but after a few vague steps faced her again. “Kiss me.”

Cora flew to her arms, and the compact had scarce been sealed before the younger of the parties was already at the
passage to the front. “We meet of course at the station.”

Mrs. Gracedew thought. “If all goes well. But where shall you be meanwhile?”

Her confederate had no need to think. “Can’t you guess?”

The bang of the house-door, the next minute, so helped the answer to the riddle as fairly to force it, when she
found herself alone, from her lips. “At that funny old grotto? Well,” she sighed, “I like funny old grottos!”
She found herself alone, however, only for a minute; Mr. Prodmore’s formidable presence had darkened the door from the
court.

7

“My daughter’s not here?” he demanded from the threshold.

“Your daughter’s not here.” She had rapidly got under arms. “But it’s a convenience to me, Mr. Prodmore, that
you are, for I’ve something very particular to ask you.”

Her interlocutor crossed straight to the morning-room. “I shall be delighted to answer your question, but I must
first put my hand on Miss Prodmore.” This hand the next instant stayed itself on the latch, and he appealed to the
amiable visitor. “Unless indeed she’s occupied in there with Captain Yule?”

Mr. Prodmore came straight away from the door. “Then where the deuce is Captain Yule?”

The amiable visitor turned a trifle less direct. “His absence, for which I’m responsible, is just what renders the
inquiry I speak of to you possible.” She had already assumed a most inquiring air, yet it was soon clear that she
needed every advantage her manner could give her. “What will you take —? what will you take —?”

It had the sound, as she faltered, of a general question, and Mr. Prodmore raised his eyebrows. “Take? Nothing,
thank you — I’ve just had a cup of tea.” Then suddenly, as if on the broad hint: “Won’t you have one?”

“Yes, with pleasure — but not yet.” She looked about her again; she was now at close quarters and, concentrated,
anxious, pressed her hand a moment to her brow.

This struck her companion. “Don’t you think you’d be better for it immediately?”

He took her, as his own followed them, more quickly up, expanding in the presence of such a tribute from a real
connoisseur. “One of these charming old things that take your fancy?”

She looked at him straight now. “They all take my fancy!”

“All?” He enjoyed it as the joke of a rich person — the kind of joke he sometimes made himself.

“Every single one!” said Mrs. Gracedew. Then with still a finer shade of the familiar: “Should you be willing to
treat, Mr. Prodmore, for your interest in this property?”

He threw back his head: she had scattered over the word “interest” such a friendly, faded colour. She was either
not joking or was rich indeed; and there was a place always kept in his conversation for the arrival of money,
as there is always a box in a well-appointed theatre for that of royalty. “Am I to take it from you then that you
know about my interest —?”

“Everything!” said Mrs. Gracedew with a world of wit.

“Excuse me, madam!”— he himself was now more reserved. “You don’t know everything if you don’t know that my interest
— considerable as it might well have struck you — has just ceased to exist. I’ve given it up”— Mr. Prodmore softened
the blow —“for a handsome equivalent.”

“It will be by some such description as the term you use that I shall doubtless, in the future, permit myself, in
the common course, to allude to Captain Yule. Unless indeed I call him —” But Mr. Prodmore dropped the bolder thought.
“It will depend on what he calls me.”

Mrs. Gracedew covered him a moment with the largeness of her charity. “Won’t it depend a little on what your
daughter herself calls him?”

Mr. Prodmore seriously considered. “No. That,” he declared with delicacy, “will be between the happy pair.”

“Am I to take it from you then — I adopt your excellent phrase,” Mrs. Gracedew said —“that Miss Prodmore has already
accepted him?”

Her companion, with his head still in the air, seemed to signify that he simply put it down on the table and that
she could take it or not as she liked. “Her character — formed by my assiduous care — enables me to locate her, I may
say even to time her, from moment to moment.” His massive watch, as he opened it, further sustained him in
this process. “It’s my assured conviction that she’s accepting him while we stand here.”

Mrs. Gracedew was so affected by his assured conviction that, with an odd, inarticulate sound, she forbore to stand
longer — she rapidly moved away, taking one of the brief excursions of step and sense that had been for her, from the
first, under the noble roof, so many dumb but decisive communions. But it was soon over, and she floated back on a wave
that showed her to be, since she had let herself go, by this time quite in the swing and describing a considerable
curve. “Dear Mr. Prodmore, why are you so imprudent as to make your daughter afraid of you? You should have taught her
to confide in you. She has clearly shown me,” she almost soothingly pursued, “that she can confide.”

“You may take it from me!” Mrs. Gracedew laughed. “Let me suggest that, as fortune has thrown us together a minute,
you follow her good example.” She put out a reassuring hand — she could perfectly show him the way. “Tell me, for
instance, the ground of your objection to poor Mr. Pegg. I mean Mr. Pegg of Bellborough, Mr. Hall Pegg, the godson of
your daughter’s grandmother and the associate of his father in their flourishing house; to whom (as he is to
it and to her) Miss Prodmore’s devotedly attached.”

Mr. Prodmore had in the course of this speech availed himself of the support of the nearest chair, where, in spite
of his subsidence, he appeared in his amazement twice his natural size. “It has gone so far as that?”

She rose before him as if in triumph. “It has gone so far that you had better let it go the rest of the way!”

He had lost breath, but he had positively gained dignity. “It’s too monstrous, to have plotted to keep me in the
dark!”

“Why, it’s only when you’re kept in the dark that your daughter’s kept in the light!” She argued it with a candour
that might have served for brilliancy. “It’s at her own earnest request that I plead to you for her liberty of choice.
She’s an honest girl — perhaps even a peculiar girl; and she’s not a baby. You over-do, I think, the nursing. She has a
perfect right to her preference.”

Poor Mr. Prodmore couldn’t help taking it from her, and, this being the case, he still took it in the most
convenient way. “And pray haven’t I a perfect right to mine?” he asked from his chair.

She fairly seemed to serve it up to him — to put down the dish with a flourish. “Not at her expense. You expect her
to give up too much.”

“And what has she,” he appealed, “expected me to give up? What but the desire of my heart and the dream of
my life? Captain Yule announced to me but a few minutes since his intention to offer her his hand.”

She faced him on it as over the table. “Well, if he does, I think he’ll simply find —”

“Find what?” They looked at each other hard.

“Why, that she won’t have it.”

Oh, Mr. Prodmore now sprang up. “She will!”

“She won’t!” Mrs. Gracedew more distinctly repeated.

“She shall!” returned her adversary, making for the staircase with the evident sense of where reinforcement
might be most required.

Mrs. Gracedew, however, with a spring, was well before him. “She shan’t!” She spoke with positive passion and
practically so barred the way that he stood arrested and bewildered, and they faced each other, for a flash, like
enemies. But it all went out, on her part, in a flash too — in a sudden wonderful smile. “Now tell me how much!”

Mr. Prodmore continued to glare — the sweat was on his brow. But while he slowly wiped it with a pocket-handkerchief
of splendid scarlet silk, he remained so silent that he would have had for a spectator the effect of meeting in a
manner her question. More formally to answer it he had at last to turn away. “How can I tell you anything so
preposterous?”

She was all ready to inform him. “Simply by computing the total amount to which, for your benefit, this unhappy
estate is burdened.” He listened with his back presented, but that appeared to strike her, as she fixed this expanse,
as an encouragement to proceed. “If I’ve troubled you by showing you that your speculation is built on the sand, let me
atone for it by my eagerness to take off your hands an investment from which you derive so little profit.”

He at last gave her his attention, but quite as if there were nothing in it. “And pray what profit will you
derive —?”

“Ah, that’s my own secret!” She would show him as well no glimpse of it — her laugh but rattled the box. “I want
this house!”

There was nevertheless something in her that could hold him, and it came out, after an instant, quietly and
reasonably enough. “I’ll practically pay for it, Mr. Prodmore — if you’ll only tell me your figure.”

“My figure?”

“Your figure.”

Mr. Prodmore waited — then removed his eyes from her face. He appeared to have waited on purpose to let her hope of
a soft answer fall from a greater height. “My figure would be quite my own!”

“Then it will match, in that respect,” Mrs. Gracedew laughed, “this overture, which is quite my own! As
soon as you’ve let me know it I cable to Missoura Top to have the money sent right out to you.”

Mr. Prodmore surveyed in a superior manner this artless picture of a stroke of business. “You imagine that having
the money sent right out to me will make you owner of this place?”

She herself, with her head on one side, studied her sketch and seemed to twirl her pencil. “No — not quite. But I’ll
settle the rest with Captain Yule.”

Her companion looked, over his white waistcoat, at his large tense shoes, the patent-leather shine of which so
flashed propriety back at him that he became, the next moment, doubly erect on it. “Captain Yule has nothing to
sell.”

She received the remark with surprise. “Then what have you been trying to buy?”

She had touched in himself even a sharper spring. “Do you mean to say,” he cried, “you want to buy that?”
She stared at his queer emphasis, which was intensified by a queer grimace; then she turned from him with a change of
colour and an ejaculation that led to nothing more, after a few seconds, than a somewhat conscious silence — a silence
of which Mr. Prodmore made use to follow up his unanswered question with another. “Is your proposal that I should
transfer my investment to you for the mere net amount of it your conception of a fair bargain?”

This second inquiry, however, she could, as she slowly came round, substantially meet. “Pray, then, what is
yours?”

“Mine would be, not that I should simply get my money back, but that I should get the effective value of the
house.”

Mrs. Gracedew considered it. “But isn’t the effective value of the house just what your money expresses?”

The lid of his hard left eye, the harder of the two, just dipped with the effect of a wink. “No, madam. It’s just
what yours does. It’s moreover just what your lips have already expressed so distinctly!”

She clearly did her best to follow him. “To those people — when I showed the place off?”

Mr. Prodmore laughed. “You seemed to be taking bids then!”

She was candid, but earnest. “Taking them?”

“Oh, like an auctioneer! You ran it up high!” And Mr. Prodmore laughed again.

She turned a little pale, but it added to her brightness. “I certainly did, if saying it was charming —”

“Charming?” Mr. Prodmore broke in. “You said it was magnificent. You said it was unique. That was your very word.
You said it was the perfect specimen of its class in England.” He was more than accusatory, he was really
crushing. “Oh, you got in deep!”

It was indeed an indictment, and her smile was perhaps now rather set. “Possibly. But taunting me with my absurd
high spirits and the dreadful liberties I took doesn’t in the least tell me how deep you’re in!”

“For you, Mrs. Gracedew?” He took a few steps, looking at his shoes again and as if to give her time to plead —
since he wished to be quite fair — that it was not for her. “1’m in to the tune of fifty thousand.”

She was silent, on this announcement, so long that he once more faced her; but if what he showed her in doing so at
last made her speak, it also took the life from her tone. “That’s a great deal of money, Mr. Prodmore.”

The tone didn’t matter, but only the truth it expressed, which he so thoroughly liked to hear. “So I’ve often had
occasion to say to myself!”

“If it’s a large sum for you, then,” said Mrs. Gracedew, “it’s a still larger one for me.” She sank into a chair
with a vague melancholy; such a mass loomed huge, and she sat down before it as a solitary herald, resigning himself
with a sigh to wait, might have leaned against a tree before a besieged city. “We women”— she wished to conciliate
—“have more modest ideas.”

But Mr. Prodmore would scarce condescend to parley. “Is it as a ‘modest idea’ that you describe your extraordinary
intrusion —?”

His question scarce reached her; she was so lost for the moment in the sense of innocent community with her sex. “I
mean I think we measure things often rather more exactly.”

There would have been no doubt of Mr. Prodmore’s very different community as he rudely replied: “Then you measured
this thing exactly half an hour ago!”

It was a long way to go back, but Mrs. Gracedew, in her seat, musingly made the journey, from which she then
suddenly returned with a harmless, indeed quite a happy, memento. “Was I very grotesque?”

He demurred. “Grotesque?”

“I mean —did I go on about it?”

Mr. Prodmore would have no general descriptions; he was specific, he was vivid. “You banged the desk. You raved. You
shrieked.”

This was a note she appeared indulgently, almost tenderly, to recognise. “We do shriek at Missoura
Top!”

“I don’t know what you do at Missoura Top, but I know what you did at Covering End!”

She warmed at last to his tone. “So do I then! I surprised you. You weren’t at all prepared —”

He took her briskly up. “No — and I’m not prepared yet!”

Mrs. Gracedew could quite see it. “Yes, you’re too astonished.”

“My astonishment’s my own affair,” he retorted —“not less so than my memory!”

“Oh, 1 yield to your memory,” said the charming woman, “and I confess my extravagance. But quite, you know,
as extravagance.”

“I don’t at all know,”— Mr. Prodmore shook it off — “nor what you call extravagance.”

She had too happy a beauty, as she sat in her high-backed chair, to have been condemned to say that to any man
without a certain effect. The effect on Mr. Prodmore was striking. “So you said,” he sternly inquired, “what you didn’t
believe?”

She flushed with the avowal. “Yes — for you.”

He looked at her hard. “For me?”

Under his eye — for her flush continued — she slowly got up. “And for those good people.”

“Oh!”— he sounded most sarcastic. “Should you like me to call them back?”

“No.” She was still gay enough, but very decided. “I took them in.”

“And now you want to take me?”

“Oh, Mr. Prodmore!” she almost pitifully, but not quite adequately, moaned.

He appeared to feel he had gone a little far. “Well, if we’re not what you say —”

“Yes?”— she looked up askance at the stroke.

“Why the devil do you want us?” The question rang out and was truly for the poor lady, as the quick suffusion of her
eyes showed, a challenge it would take more time than he left her properly to pick up. He left her in fact no time at
all before he went on: “Why the devil did you say you’d offer fifty?”

She looked quite wan and seemed to wonder. “Did I say that?” She could only let his challenge lie. “It was
a figure of speech!”

“Then that’s the kind of figure we’re talking about!” Mr. Prodmore’s sharpness would have struck an auditor as the
more effective that, on the heels of this thrust, seeing the ancient butler reappear, he dropped the victim of it as
comparatively unimportant and directed his fierceness instantly to Chivers, who mildly gaped at him from the threshold
of the court. “Have you seen Miss Prodmore? If you haven’t, find her!”

Mrs. Gracedew addressed their visitor in a very different tone, though with the full authority of her benevolence.
“You won’t, my dear man.” To Mr. Prodmore also she continued bland. “I happen to know she has gone for a walk.”

“A walk — alone?” Mr. Prodmore gasped.

“No — not alone.” Mrs. Gracedew looked at Chivers with a vague smile of appeal for help, but he could only give her,
from under his bent old brow, the blank decency of his wonder. It seemed to make her feel afresh that she was, after
all, alone — so that in her loneliness, which had also its fine sad charm, she risked another brush with their
formidable friend. “Cora has gone with Mr. Pegg.”

“Pegg has been here?”

It was like a splash in a full basin, but she launched the whole craft. “He walked with her from the station.”

“When she arrived?” Mr. Prodmore rose like outraged Neptune. “That’s why she was so late?”

Mr. Prodmore looked round him in purple dismay — it was so clearly a question for him where he should get,
and what! “In which direction did they go?” he imperiously asked.

His rudeness was too evident to be more than lightly recognised. “I think I must let you ascertain for
yourself!”

All he could do then was to shout it to Chivers. “Call my carriage, you ass!” After which, as the old man melted
into the vestibule, he dashed about blindly for his hat, pounced upon it and seemed, furious but helpless, on the point
of hurling it at his contradictress as a gage of battle. “So you abetted and protected this wicked, low intrigue?”

She had something in her face now that was indifferent to any violence. “You’re too disappointed to see your real
interest: oughtn’t I therefore in common charity to point it out to you?”

He faced her question so far as to treat it as one. “What do you know of my disappointment?”

There was something in his very harshness that even helped her, for it added at this moment to her sense of making
out in his narrowed glare a couple of tears of rage. “I know everything.”

“What do you know of my real interest?” he went on as if he had not heard her.

“I know enough for my purpose — which is to offer you a handsome condition. I think it’s not I who have protected
the happy understanding that you call by so ugly a name; it’s the happy understanding that has put me”— she gained
confidence —“well, in a position. Do drive after them, if you like — but catch up with them only to forgive them. If
you’ll do that, I’ll pay your price.”

The particular air with which, a minute after Mrs. Gracedew had spoken these words, Mr. Prodmore achieved a transfer
of his attention to the inside of his hat — this special shade of majesty would have taxed the descriptive resources of
the most accomplished reporter. It is none the less certain that he appeared for some time absorbed in that receptacle
— appeared at last to breathe into it hard. “What do you call my price?”

He looked at her as if stupefied. “That’s not my price — and it never for a moment was!” If derision can be
dry, Mr. Prodmore’s was of the driest. “Besides,” he rang out, “my price is up!”

She caught it with a long wail. “Up?”

Oh, he let her have it now! “Seventy thousand.”

She turned away overwhelmed, but still with voice for her despair. “Oh, deary me!”

Mr. Prodmore was already at the door, from which he launched his ultimatum. “It’s to take or to leave!”

She would have had to leave it, perhaps, had not something happened at this moment to nerve her for the effort of
staying him with a quick motion. Captain Yule had come into sight on the staircase and, after just faltering at what he
himself saw, had marched resolutely enough down. She watched him arrive — watched him with an attention that visibly
and responsively excited his own; after which she passed nearer to their companion. “Seventy thousand, then!”— it
gleamed between them, in her muffled hiss, as if she had planted a dagger.

Mr. Prodmore, to do him justice, took his wound in front. “Seventy thousand — done!” And, without another look at
Yule, he was presently heard to bang the outer door after him for a sign.

8

The young man, meanwhile, had approached in surprise. “He’s gone? I’ve been looking for him!”

Mrs. Gracedew was out of breath; there was a disturbed whiteness of bosom in her which needed time to subside and
which she might have appeared to retreat before him on purpose to veil. “I don’t think, you know, that you need him —
now.”

Clement Yule was mystified. “Now?”

She recovered herself enough to explain — made an effort at least to be plausible. “I mean that — if you don’t mind
— you must deal with me. I’ve arranged with Mr. Prodmore to take it over.”

Oh, he gave her no help! “Take what over?”

She looked all about as if not quite thinking what it could be called; at last, however, she offered with a smile a
sort of substitute for a name. “Why, your debt.”

But he was only the more bewildered. “Can you — without arranging with me?”

She turned it round, but as if merely to oblige him. “That’s precisely what I want to do.” Then, more brightly, as
she thought further: “That is, I mean, I want you to arrange with me. Surely you will,” she said
encouragingly.

His own processes, in spite of a marked earnestness, were much less rapid. “But if I arrange with anybody —”

“Yes?” She cheerfully waited.

“How do I perform my engagement?”

“The one to Mr. Prodmore?”

He looked surprised at her speaking as if he had half-a-dozen. “Yes — that’s the worst.”

“Certainly — the worst!” And she gave a happy laugh that made him stare.

He broke into quite a different one. “You speak as if its being the worst made it the best!”

“It does — for me. You don’t,” said Mrs. Gracedew, “perform any engagement.”

He required a moment to take it in; then something extraordinary leaped into his face. “He lets me off?”

Ah, she could ring out now! “He lets you off.”

It lifted him high, but only to drop him with an audible thud. “Oh, I see — I lose my house!”

“Dear, no —that doesn’t follow!” She spoke as if the absurdity he indicated were the last conceivable, but
there was a certain want of sharpness of edge in her expression of the alternative. “You arrange with me to
keep it.”

There was quite a corresponding want, clearly, in the image presented to the Captain — of which, for a moment, he
seemed with difficulty to follow the contour. “How do I arrange?”

“Well, we must think,” said Mrs. Gracedew; “we must wait.” She spoke as if this were a detail for which she had not
yet had much attention; only bringing out, however, the next instant in an encouraging cry and as if it were by itself
almost a solution: “We must find some way!” She might have been talking to a reasonable child.

But even reasonable children ask too many questions. “Yes — and what way can we find?” Clement Yule,
glancing about him, was so struck with the absence of ways that he appeared to remember with something of regret how
different it had been before. “With Prodmore it was simple enough. You see I could marry his daughter.”

Mrs. Gracedew was silent just long enough for her soft ironic smile to fill the cup of the pause. “Could
you?”

It was as if he had tasted in the words the wine at the brim; for he gave, under the effect of them, a sudden
headshake and an awkward laugh. “Well, never perhaps that exactly — when it came to the point. But I had to,
you see —” It was difficult to say just what.

She took advantage of it, looking hard, but not seeing at all. “You had to —?”

“Well,” he repeated ruefully, “think a lot about it. You didn’t suspect that?”

Oh, if he came to suspicions she could only break off! “Don’t ask me too many questions.”

He looked an instant as if he wondered why. “But isn’t this just the moment for them?” He fronted her, with a
quickness he tried to dissimulate, from the other side. “What did you suppose?”

She looked everywhere but into his face. “Why, I supposed you were in distress.”

He was very grave. “About his terms?”

“About his terms of course!” she laughed. “Not about his religious opinions.”

His gratitude was too great for gaiety. “You really, in your beautiful sympathy, guessed my fix?”

But she declined to be too solemn. “Dear Captain Yule, it all quite stuck out of you!”

“You mean I floundered like a drowning man —?”

Well, she consented to have meant that. “Till I plunged in!”

He appeared there for a few seconds, to see her again take the jump and to listen again to the splash; then, with an
odd, sharp impulse, he turned his back. “You saved me.”

She wouldn’t deny it — on the contrary. “What a pity, now, I haven’t a daughter!”

On this he slowly came round again. “What should I do with her?”

“You’d treat her, I hope, better than you’ve treated Miss Prodmore.”

The young man positively coloured. “But I haven’t been bad —?”

The sight of this effect of her small joke produced on Mrs. Gracedew’s part an emotion less controllable than any
she had yet felt. “Oh, you delightful goose!” she irrepressibly dropped.

She made his blush deepen, but the aggravation was a relief. “Of course — I’m all right, and there’s only one pity
in the matter. I’ve nothing — nothing whatever, not a scrap of service nor a thing you’d care for — to offer you in
compensation.”

She looked at him ever so kindly. “I’m not, as they say, ‘on the make.’” Never had he been put right with a lighter
hand. “I didn’t do it for payment.”

“Then what did you do it for?”

For something, it might have seemed, as her eyes dropped and strayed, that had got brushed into a crevice of the old
pavement. “Because I hated Mr. Prodmore.”

He conscientiously demurred. “So much as all that?”

“Oh, well,” she replied impatiently, “of course you also know how much I like the house. My hates and my likes,” she
subtly explained, “can never live together. I get one of them out. The one this time was that man.”

He showed a candour of interest. “Yes — you got him out. Yes — I saw him go.” And his inner vision appeared to
attend for some moments Mr. Prodmore’s departure. “But how did you do it?”

“Oh, I don’t know. Women —!” Mrs. Gracedew but vaguely sketched it.

A touch or two, however, for that subject, could of course almost always suffice. “Precisely — women. May 1 smoke
again?” Clement Yule abruptly asked.

“Certainly. But I managed Mr. Prodmore,” she laughed as he re-lighted, “without cigarettes.”

Her companion puffed. “I couldn’t manage him.”

“So I saw!”

“I couldn’t get him out.”

“So he saw!”

Captain Yule, for a little, lost himself in his smoke. “Where is he gone?”

“I haven’t the least idea. But I meet him again,” she hastened to add —“very soon.”

“And when do you meet me?”

“Why, whenever you’ll come to see me.” For the twentieth time she gathered herself as if the words she had just
spoken were quite her last hand. “At present, you see, I have a train to catch.”

Absorbed in the trivial act that engaged him, he gave her no help. “A train?”

“Surely. I didn’t walk.”

“No; but even trains —!” His eyes clung to her now. “You fly?”

“I try to. Good-bye.”

He had got between her and the door of departure quite as, on her attempt to quit him half an hour before, he had
anticipated her approach to the stairs; and in this position he took no notice of her farewell. “I said just now that I
had nothing to offer you. But of course I’ve the house itself.”

“The house?” She stared. “Why, I’ve got it?”

“Got it?”

“All in my head, I mean. That’s all I want.” She had not yet, save to Mr. Prodmore, made quite so light of it.

This had its action in his markedly longer face. “Why, I thought you loved it so!”

Ah, she was perfectly consistent. “I love it far too much to deprive you of it.”

Yet Clement Yule could in a fashion meet her. “Oh, it wouldn’t be depriving —!”

She altogether protested. “Not to turn you out —?”

“Dear lady, I’ve never been in!”

Oh, she was none the less downright. “You’re in now— I’ve put you, and you must stay.” He looked round so
woefully, however, that she presently attenuated. “I don’t mean all the while, but long enough —!”

“Long enough for what?”

“For me to feel you’re here.”

“And how long will that take?”

“Well, you think me very fast — but sometimes I’m slow. I told you just now, at any rate,” she went on, “that I had
arranged you should lose nothing. Is the very next thing I do, then, to make you lose everything?”

“It isn’t a question of what I lose,” the young man anxiously cried; “it’s a question of what I do! What
have I done to find it all so plain?” Fate was really — fate reversed, improved, and unnatural — too much for
him, and his heated young face showed honest stupefaction. “I haven’t lifted a finger. It’s you who have done all.”

“Yes, but if you’re just where you were before, how in the world are you saved?” She put it to him with still
superior lucidity.

“By my life’s being my own again — to do what I want.”

“What you ‘want’”— Mrs. Gracedew’s handsome uplifted head had it all there, every inch of it —“is to keep your
house.”

“Ah, but only,” he perfectly assented, “if, as you said, you find a way!”

“I have found a way — and there the way is: for me just simply not to touch the place. What you
‘want,’” she argued more closely, “is what made you give in to Prodmore. What you ‘want’ is these walls and these
acres. What you ‘want’ is to take the way I first showed you.”

Her companion’s eyes, quitting for the purpose her face, looked to the quarter marked by her last words as at an
horizon now remote. “Why, the way you first showed me was to marry Cora!”

She had to admit it, but as little as possible. “Practically — yes.”

“Well, it’s just ‘practically’ that I can’t!”

“I didn’t know that then,” said Mrs. Gracedew. “You didn’t tell me.”

He passed, with an approach to a grimace, his hand over the back of his head. “I felt a delicacy!”

“I didn’t even know that.” She spoke it almost sadly.

“It didn’t strike you that I might?”

She thought a moment. “No.” She thought again. “No. But don’t quarrel with me about it now!”

“Quarrel with you?” he looked amazement.

She laughed, but she had changed colour. “Cora, at any rate, felt no delicacy. Cora told me.”

Clement Yule fairly gaped. “Then she did know —?”

“She knew all; and if her father said she didn’t, he simply told you what was not.” She frankly gave him this, but
the next minute, as if she had startled him more than she meant, she jumped to reassurance. “It was quite right of her.
She would have refused you.”

The young man stared. “Oh!” He was quick, however, to show — by an amusement perhaps a trifle over-done — that he
felt no personal wound. “Do you call that quite right?”

Mrs. Gracedew looked at it again. “For her— yes; and for Prodmore.”

“Oh, for Prodmore”— his laugh grew more grim —“with all my heart!”

This, then — her kind eyes seemed to drop it upon him — was all she meant. “To stay at your post —that was
the way I showed you.”

He had come round to it now, as mechanically, in intenser thought, he smoothed down the thick hair he had rubbed up;
but his face soon enough gave out, in wonder and pain, that his freedom was somehow only a new predicament. “How can I
take any way at all, dear lady —?”

“If I only stick here in your path?” She had taken him straight up, and with spirit; and the same spirit bore her to
the end. “I won’t stick a moment more! Haven’t I been trying this age to leave you?”

Clement Yule, for all answer, caught her sharply, in her passage, by the arm. “You surrender your rights?” He was
for an instant almost terrible.

She quite turned pale with it. “Weren’t you ready to surrender yours?”

“I hadn’t any, so it was deuced easy. I hadn’t paid for them.”

Oh that, she let him see — even though with his continued grasp he might hurt her — had nothing in it! “Your
ancestors had paid: it’s the same thing.” Erect there in the brightness of her triumph and the force of her logic, she
must yet, to anticipate his return, take a stride — like a sudden dip into a gully and the scramble up on the other
bank — that put her dignity to the test. “You’re just, in a manner, my tenant.”

“But how can I treat that as such a mere detail? I’m your tenant on what terms?”

“Oh, any terms — choose them for yourself!” She made an attempt to free her arm — gave it a small vain
shake. Then, as if to bribe him to let her go: “You can write me about them.”

He appeared to consider it. “To Missoura Top?”

She fully assented. “1 go right back.” As if it had put him off his guard she broke away. “Farewell!”

She broke away, but he broke faster, and once more, nearer the door, he had barred her escape. “Just one little
moment, please. If you won’t tell me your own terms, you must at least tell me Prodmore’s.”

Ah, the fiend — she could never squeeze past that! All she could do, for the instant, was to reverberate
foolishly “Prodmore’s?”

But there was nothing foolish, at last, about him. “How you did it — how you managed him.” His feet were
firm while he waited, though he had to wait some time. “You bought him out?”

She made less of it than, clearly, he had ever heard made of a stroke of business; it might have been a case of his
owing her ninepence. “I bought him out.”

He wanted at least the exact sum. “For how much?” Her silence seemed to say that she had made no note of it, but his
pressure only increased. “I really must know.”

She continued to try to treat it as if she had merely paid for his cab — she put even what she could of that
suggestion into a tender, helpless, obstinate headshake. “You shall never know!”

The only thing his own manner met was the obstinacy. “1’ll get it from him!”

She repeated her headshake, but with a world of sadness added, “Get it if you can!”

He looked into her eyes now as if it was the sadness that struck him most. “He won’t say, because he did
you?”

They showed each other, on this, the least separated faces yet. “He’ll never, never say.”

The confidence in it was so tender that it sounded almost like pity, and the young man took it up with all the flush
of the sense that pity could be but for him. This sense broke full in her face. “The scoundrel!”

“Not a bit!” she returned, with equal passion —“I was only too clever for him!” The thought of it was again an
exaltation in which she pushed her friend aside. “So let me go!”

The push was like a jar that made the vessel overflow, and he was before her now as if he stretched across the hall.
“With the heroic view of your power and the barren beauty of your sacrifice? You pour out money, you move a mountain,
and to let you ‘go,’ to close the door fast behind you, is all I can figure out to do for you?” His emotion trembled
out of him with the stammer of a new language, but it was as if in a minute or two he had thrown over all
consciousness. “You’re the most generous — you’re the noblest of women! The wonderful chance that brought you here
—!”

His own arm was grasped now — she knew better than he about the wonderful chance. “It brought you at the
same happy hour! I’ve done what I liked,” she went on very simply; “and the only way to thank me is to believe it.”

“You’ve done it for a proud, poor man”— his answer was quite as direct. “He has nothing — in the light of such a
magic as yours — either to give or to hope; but you’ve made him, in a little miraculous hour, think of you —”

He stumbled with the rush of things, and if silence can, in its way, be active, there was a collapse too, for an
instant, on her closed lips. These lips, however, she at last opened. “How have I made him think of me?”

“As he has thought of no other woman!” He had personal possession of her now, and it broke, as he pressed her, as he
pleaded, the helpless fall of his eloquence. “Mrs. Gracedew — don’t leave me.” He jerked his head passionately at the
whole place and the yellow afternoon. “If you made me care —”

“It was surely that you had made me first!” She laughed, and her laugh disengaged her, so that before he
could reply she had again put space between them.

He accepted the space now — he appeared so sure of his point. “Then let me go on caring. When I asked you awhile
back for some possible adjustment to my new source of credit, you simply put off the question — told me I must trust to
time for it. Well,” said Clement Yule, “I’ve trusted to time so effectually that ten little minutes have made me find
it. I’ve found it because I’ve so quickly found you. May I, Mrs. Gracedew, keep all that I’ve found?
I offer you in return the only thing I have to give — I offer you my hand and my life.”

She held him off, across the hall, for a time almost out of proportion to the previous wait he had just made so
little of. Then at last also, when she answered, it might have passed for a plea for further postponement, even for a
plea for mercy. “Ah, Captain Yule —!” But she turned suddenly off: the flower had been nipped in the bud by the
re-entrance of Chivers, at whom his master veritably glowered.

“What the devil is it?”

The old man showed the shock, but he had his duty. “Another party.”

Mrs. Gracedew, at this, wheeled round. “The ‘party up’!” It brought back her voice — indeed, all her gaiety. And her
gaiety was always determinant. “Show them in.”

Clement Yule’s face fell while Chivers proceeded to obey. “You’ll have them?” he wailed across the
hall.

“Ah! mayn’t I be proud of my house?” she tossed back at him.

At this, radiant, he had rushed at her. “Then you accept —?”

Her raised hand checked him. “Hush!”

He fell back — the party was there. Chivers ushered it as he had ushered the other, making the most, this time, of
more scanty material — four persons so spectacled, satchelled, shawled, and handbooked that they testified on the spot
to a particular foreign origin and presented themselves indeed very much as tourists who, at an hotel, casting up the
promise of comfort or the portent of cost, take possession, while they wait for their keys, with expert looks and free
sounds. Clement Yule, who had receded, effacing himself, to the quarter opposed to that of his companion, addressed to
their visitors a covert but dismayed stare and then, edging round, in his agitation, to the rear, instinctively sought
relief by escape through the open passage. One of the invaders meanwhile — a broad-faced gentleman with long hair
tucked behind his ears and a ring on each forefinger — had lost no time in showing he knew where to begin. He began at
the top — the proper place, and took in the dark pictures ranged above the tapestry. “Olt vamily bortraits?”— he
appealed to Chivers and spoke very loud.

Chivers rose to the occasion and, gracefully pawing the air, began also at the beginning. “Dame Dorothy Yule — who
lived to a hundred and one.”

“A hundred and one — ach so!” broke, with a resigned absence of criticism, from each of the interested
group; another member of which, however, indicated with a somewhat fatigued skip the central figure of the series, the
personage with the long white legs that Mrs. Gracedew had invited the previous inquirers to remark. “Who’s dis?” the
present inquirer asked.

The question affected the lovely lady over by the fireplace as the trumpet of battle affects a generous steed. She
flashed on the instant into the middle of the hall and into the friendliest and most familiar relation with everyone
and with everything. “John Anthony Yule, sir — who passed away, poor duck, in his flower!”

They met her with low salutations, a sweep of ugly shawls, and a brush of queer German hats: she had issued, to
their glazed convergence, from the dusk of the Middle Ages and the shade of high pieces, and now stood there, beautiful
and human and happy, in a light that, whatever it was for themselves, the very breadth of their attention, the
expression of their serious faces, converted straightway for her into a new, and oh! into the right, one. To a detached
observer of the whole it would have been promptly clear that she found herself striking these good people very much as
the lawful heir had, half an hour before, struck another stranger — that she produced in them, in her setting of
assured antiquity, quite the romantic vibration that she had responded to in the presence of that personage. They read
her as she read him, and a bright and deepening cheer, reflected dimly in their thick thoroughness, went out
from her as she accepted their reading. An impression was exchanged, for the minute, from side to side — their grave
admiration of the finest feature of the curious house and the deep free radiance of her silent, grateful “Why not?” It
made a passage of some intensity and some duration, of which the effect, indeed, the next minute, was to cause the only
lady of the party — a matron of rich Jewish type, with small nippers on a huge nose and a face out of proportion to her
little Freischütz hat — to break the spell by an uneasy turn and a stray glance at one of the other pictures. “Who’s
dat?”

“That?” The picture chanced to be a portrait over the wide arch, and something happened, at the very moment, to
arrest Mrs. Gracedew’s eyes rather above than below. What took place, in a word, was that Clement Yule, already
fidgeting in his impatience back from the front, just occupied the arch, completed her thought, and filled her vision.
“Oh, that’s my future husband!” He caught the words, but answered them only by a long look at her as he moved, with a
checked wildness of which she alone, of all the spectators, had a sense, straight across the hall again and to the
other opening. He paused there as he had done before, then with a last dumb appeal to her dropped into the court and
passed into the garden. Mrs. Gracedew, already so wonderful to their visitors, was, before she followed him, wonderful
with a greater wonder to poor Chivers. “You dear old thing — I give it all back to you!”

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